If keeping track of the stock market makes you feel like you’re seasick from being stuck on a boat in choppy waters, you’re certainly not alone. Market volatility – the inevitable ups and downs experienced when investing in stocks for any extended amount of time – is usually the primary reason why people intentionally choose to stay on the sidelines, even though they know the market will better serve them and their money over the longer-term.
Fortunately, diversifying a portfolio to minimize your exposure to volatility isn’t nearly as complicated as it might sound. You can level things out with a few simple tips so they won’t seem like such a bumpy ride between now and your investment endgame.
Spread Things Out
Investing for financial goals – particularly when using stocks – is always about proper risk management. Having a basic understanding of probability will significantly assist in lowering the volatility you experience in your investments. In other words, the more investments you own – whether that’s stocks, bonds, mutual funds, ETFs, or anything else – the more evenly your portfolio will perform.
Extending the concept even further, not only spreading your investments throughout multiple positions but also asset classes will provide even greater benefits to minimizing volatility. Blending stocks, bonds, cash-based instruments, and other asset classes will limit the extent of swings your portfolio will experience over the longer term.
For the most part, fixed instruments like bonds and cash are less volatile than their stock-based counterparts, dampening the volatility you would otherwise feel if just purely using stocks.
Likewise, the stock portion of your portfolio can be spread out between different-sized companies and industries to create the same effect. For instance, if you own both auto manufacturers and high-tech companies and a new tariff is put in place that negatively impacts your auto stocks, your high-tech companies won’t be affected by the tax and, therefore, smooth out what would otherwise be an extremely bumpy ride.
Age Is Important
Also, when explicitly targeting investments aimed for a particular age like your retirement or college for your kids, the farther you are from those goals, the riskier you can be with those investments since you have more time to recover from periods of volatility.
As a rule of thumb, since stocks tend to be the most volatile of the primary asset classes, you can afford to have more stock in your portfolio relative to other assets the further out those goals are, magnifying the volatility you’ll experience, but likely the growth as well.
No matter what your goal might be or how risk-averse you naturally are, using allocation funds is a convenient way to achieve a well-diversified portfolio suitable to your personality and financial goals without having to purchase many different positions individually.
Is your portfolio diversified enough to match your risk tolerance and time horizon, or do you need help with your financial plan? We’re here to help! Simply click here or call (763) 445-2772 to schedule a complimentary consultation today!