Introduction
Investment Basics
Risk
DiversificationIntroduction
Tips For
Getting Diversified
Appropriate Diversification
Maximum Portfolio
Investments
that Reduce Risk
Asset Class
Mix
Asset Allocation
Your Place in the Market |
Getting
Into Investments That Reduce Risk
Modern Portfolio Theory considers the total performance of
an investor's account. When you plan your investments, consider the shape of the whole
account. Don't think about how risky an individual stock or bond is, but about how risky
it makes your whole bundle of investments.
The risk, or fluctuation in return, of your total
investment account can be derived mathematically. It depends on two factors -- the risk of
each individual investment and the correlation between the investments.
It is that second factor that many investors forget about
when determining their risk. The risk of your total portfolio is not simply the average
risk of all the individual securities. To gauge your risk picture accurately, you must
understand that assets don't all go up or down at the same time.
We've already mentioned correlation. When two assets are
positively correlated, they move in the same pattern. More importantly, when they are
negatively correlated, they move in opposite patterns, as in the graph above. This
"zig-zag" effect allows you to balance your investments, so that one investment,
in theory, will always be rising when another is falling (in practice, securities don't
move so neatly or predictably).
So, remember this crucial point when you are shaping your
investment portfolio: the less your assets move together, the better off you will be.
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