From Your Perspective:
Identifying an investment strategy
Home > Path to retirement: First job > Identifying an investment strategy > Allocating for retirement
   
identifying an investment strategy
1. Identifying an investment strategy
2. Other retirement assets
3. Your age & your strategy
4. Your future needs
5. Your risk tolerance
6. Your tax bracket
7. Allocating for retirement
8. Reallocating your portfolio
 
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Allocating for retirement

Once you’ve determined your investing strategy by weighing these different factors, you can apply that strategy when you’re allocating assets within your portfolio — perhaps the most important of all your investing decisions.

One way to determine your asset allocation might be to start with a sample allocation, such as this one, which shows a potential level of risk and diversification appropriate for particular stages in your career:

  20 or more years to retirement 10 to 20 years to retirement 5 years or fewer to retirement
Large-company stocks 40% 35% 30%
Small-company stocks 30% 20% 10%
International stocks 10% 10%  
Balanced funds (stocks & bonds) 10% 20% 20%
Long-term bonds 10% 15% 30%
Money market funds     10%
       

After considering the other factors that personalize your investing strategy — your other retirement assets, future income needs, risk tolerance, and tax bracket — you can adjust your allocation accordingly.
     
   
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