Tuesday 18 December 2007

Diversify Your Investments and Wealth

A great piece of financial advice! It means, don’t put all your eggs in one basket. If you work for an insurance company, have all of your 401K and stock options invested in that same company, you’re not diversified. A good diversification strategy involves spreading your investments and wealth across many different asset classes. By doing so, you reduce the risk of losing a large percentage of your wealth by events that only affect one asset class.

The right diversification strategy for you depends on how much wealth you have, your age range, your risk profile and many other factors. Although I can’t recommend specific strategies for diversification, I can offer some simplified guidelines:

Diversify across the following categories: real estate, stocks, savings or money market accounts, bonds, other investments

Diversify within each category above.

If you invest in stocks, try not to let any one stock account for more than 5-10% of your portfolio.

Use mutual funds to diversify stock risk. Buy different mutual funds from different fund companies.

Keep 3-6 months of income in liquid assets including cash, savings or money market accounts. As you approach retirement, increase this amount dramatically.

Although bonds are often a staple to a well-diversified portfolio, I wouldn’t recommend investing in them unless your portfolio is large (over $200k) or unless you are close to retirement (within 5-15 years). To invest in bonds despite these circumstances, you can buy mutual funds that specialize in bonds, also known as bond funds.

If all of your wealth is in the value of your home (real estate) and you can afford a higher mortgage payment, you may want to diversify by taking a home equity loan (when interest rates are low) and investing it in another asset class. Only do this if you are comfortable taking on added financial responsibility, but doing so can sometimes increase your diversification and add to your long-term returns.