Asset Allocation

Asset allocation—dividing investments among different asset classes—is widely considered the most important investment decision. Research suggests it accounts for the majority of portfolio return variability.

Why Asset Allocation Matters

A landmark study by Brinson, Hood, and Beebower found that approximately 90% of portfolio return variability is explained by asset allocation policy, not security selection or market timing.

FactorContribution to Return Variability
Asset Allocation Policy~90%
Security Selection~5%
Market Timing~2%
Other Factors~3%

Major Asset Classes

Traditional Asset Classes

Asset ClassCharacteristicsRole in Portfolio
Equities (Stocks)Higher return potential, higher riskGrowth
Fixed Income (Bonds)Lower return, lower risk, incomeStability, income
Cash/Money MarketLowest return, highest liquiditySafety, liquidity

Alternative Asset Classes

Asset ClassCharacteristicsCorrelation to Stocks
Real Estate (REITs)Income + growth, inflation hedgeModerate
CommoditiesInflation hedge, uncorrelatedLow to moderate
Private EquityHigh return potential, illiquidVaries
Hedge FundsAbsolute return strategiesLow (if managed well)

Sub-Asset Classes

CategorySub-Classes
EquitiesLarge cap, mid cap, small cap; growth vs. value; domestic vs. international; developed vs. emerging
Fixed IncomeGovernment, corporate, municipal; investment grade vs. high yield; short, intermediate, long duration

Types of Asset Allocation

Strategic Asset Allocation (SAA)

Definition: Long-term, policy-based allocation based on client profile and goals.

FeatureDescription
Time HorizonLong-term (years)
Approach"Buy and hold" with periodic rebalancing
Based OnClient risk tolerance, time horizon, goals
ChangesOnly when client circumstances change
GoalMatch allocation to client's investment policy

Example: A moderate investor might have a strategic allocation of:

  • 60% Stocks
  • 35% Bonds
  • 5% Cash

Tactical Asset Allocation (TAA)

Definition: Short-term deviations from strategic targets based on market conditions.

FeatureDescription
Time HorizonShort-term (months)
ApproachActive adjustments based on market views
Based OnMarket valuations, economic outlook
ChangesFrequent, within defined ranges
GoalAdd value through market timing

Example: If the market appears overvalued, a tactical manager might temporarily shift from the strategic 60% equity to 50% equity.

Comparing SAA and TAA

FeatureStrategicTactical
PhilosophyMarkets are efficientMarkets can be timed
TradingMinimal (rebalancing only)More frequent
CostsLowerHigher
Skill RequiredLowerRequires forecasting ability
EvidenceGenerally supportedMixed results

Dynamic Asset Allocation

Definition: Continuous adjustments based on market conditions, often contrarian.

FeatureDescription
ApproachSystematically adjust allocation as markets move
Example RuleReduce equity exposure as market rises
NatureOften contrarian (buy low, sell high)
ImplementationCan be formula-based

Constant-Proportion Portfolio Insurance (CPPI)

Definition: Formula-based strategy that maintains a floor value while adjusting equity exposure.

Market ConditionAction
Portfolio risesIncrease equity exposure
Portfolio fallsDecrease equity exposure

Goal: Protect against downside while participating in upside.

Rebalancing

Purpose of Rebalancing

Rebalancing returns a portfolio to its target allocation after market movements cause drift.

BenefitDescription
Risk ControlPrevents portfolio from becoming too aggressive or conservative
DisciplineSystematically "buy low, sell high"
AlignmentKeeps portfolio consistent with investment policy

Rebalancing Approaches

ApproachDescriptionProsCons
CalendarRebalance at fixed intervals (quarterly, annually)Simple, predictableMay not capture large drifts
PercentageRebalance when allocation drifts by X% (e.g., 5%)Responsive to marketRequires monitoring
CombinationBoth calendar and percentage triggersBalanced approachMore complex

Example: If target is 60% stocks and actual allocation drifts to 70% stocks after a rally, rebalancing would sell stocks (high) and buy bonds (relatively low).

Rebalancing Considerations

FactorConsideration
Transaction CostsFrequent rebalancing incurs trading costs
Tax ImpactSelling winners may trigger capital gains
Account TypeTax-deferred accounts avoid tax impact
TimingMore frequent isn't always better

Asset Allocation Process

Steps for Advisers

  1. Gather client information (risk tolerance, time horizon, goals)
  2. Determine strategic allocation based on client profile
  3. Select specific investments within each asset class
  4. Implement the portfolio
  5. Monitor and rebalance as needed
  6. Review periodically and adjust for life changes

In Practice

Common allocation guidelines (rules of thumb, not absolute rules):

Client TypeStocksBondsCash
Aggressive80-100%0-20%0-5%
Moderate Growth60-80%20-35%0-5%
Moderate40-60%35-55%5-10%
Conservative20-40%50-70%10-20%

On the Exam

Series 65 frequently tests:

  • Distinguishing strategic (long-term) from tactical (short-term) allocation
  • Understanding the purpose of rebalancing
  • Knowing asset allocation is the primary driver of returns
  • Recognizing that rebalancing systematically "buys low, sells high"

Key Takeaways

  1. Asset allocation accounts for ~90% of portfolio return variability
  2. Strategic allocation is long-term, based on client profile
  3. Tactical allocation involves short-term deviations based on market views
  4. Rebalancing maintains target allocation and controls risk
  5. Rebalancing systematically "buys low, sells high"
  6. Consider transaction costs and taxes when rebalancing
Test Your Knowledge

Strategic asset allocation differs from tactical asset allocation in that strategic allocation:

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B
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D
Test Your Knowledge

The primary purpose of portfolio rebalancing is to:

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B
C
D
Test Your Knowledge

Research suggests that approximately what percentage of portfolio return variability is explained by asset allocation policy?

A
B
C
D