Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:60/40. Plenty of room for growth, but more stability and income than with a higher percentage of equities, along with less risk. My portfolio is large, and I have no need to reach for every last possible bit of growth through a more risky higher percentage of equity allocation - taking some "off the table" is a form of insurance.
Studies have shown that while higher percentage of equities result, over a very long time period, in higher returns, the differential isn't actually so high as to justify for many people the associated risks and volatility of such a portfolio. In the chart on the page below, the 60/40 portfolio returned 8.8% compared to 10.5% for the 100% equity portfolio, a real but not massive difference when you also look at the relative volatilities of the two.
https://investor.vanguard.com/investor-resources-education/education/model-portfolio-allocation
It could make a massive difference over, say, 30 years. Not that I'm all equities due to that
Anonymous wrote:60/40. Plenty of room for growth, but more stability and income than with a higher percentage of equities, along with less risk. My portfolio is large, and I have no need to reach for every last possible bit of growth through a more risky higher percentage of equity allocation - taking some "off the table" is a form of insurance.
Studies have shown that while higher percentage of equities result, over a very long time period, in higher returns, the differential isn't actually so high as to justify for many people the associated risks and volatility of such a portfolio. In the chart on the page below, the 60/40 portfolio returned 8.8% compared to 10.5% for the 100% equity portfolio, a real but not massive difference when you also look at the relative volatilities of the two.
https://investor.vanguard.com/investor-resources-education/education/model-portfolio-allocation
Anonymous wrote:60/40. Plenty of room for growth, but more stability and income than with a higher percentage of equities, along with less risk. My portfolio is large, and I have no need to reach for every last possible bit of growth through a more risky higher percentage of equity allocation - taking some "off the table" is a form of insurance.
Studies have shown that while higher percentage of equities result, over a very long time period, in higher returns, the differential isn't actually so high as to justify for many people the associated risks and volatility of such a portfolio. In the chart on the page below, the 60/40 portfolio returned 8.8% compared to 10.5% for the 100% equity portfolio, a real but not massive difference when you also look at the relative volatilities of the two.
https://investor.vanguard.com/investor-resources-education/education/model-portfolio-allocation
Anonymous wrote:What percent do you have in other asset classes? And what is your strategy with those investments? Is it just to weather a market downturn so you don’t sell depressed stock? Is it to be opportunistic and have cash to buy when the bubble bursts? Is it you just don’t like being 100 percent all in on equities?