Expert Guidance:
Allocate your assets
Home > Investment Choices: Cash > Allocate your assets > Your allocation model > A short-term approach
   
Allocate your assets
1. Allocate your assets
2. Allocation & risk
3. Asset classes: Stock
4. Alternative investments
5. Determining allocation
6. Your allocation model
An aggressive approach
A moderate approach
A conservative approach
A short-term approach
Allocating retirement accounts
Annuitization
Managing your allocation
7. Why rebalance?
8. Allocation & uncertainty
 
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A short-term approach

Very short-term financial goals, such as buying a home within the next year or two or sending your high school senior to college, call for an allocation strategy focused on capital preservation. That means keeping most of your money available and safe in high-quality fixed-income investments and insured accounts.

If you don't want to give up all the growth potential of stocks, you might keep a small portion of your portfolio allocated to that asset class. However, you run the risk that you'll have to redeem your shares at a loss if the market goes down. You can manage this risk to some extent by deciding ahead of time that you'll sell when a stock increases or decreases in value by a fixed amount, say 20%.

The extent to which cash equivalents — which are usually very safe and often even insured — bonds, and stocks may be represented in your short-term portfolio depends not only on how soon you'll need the money, but also on how long the money needs to last.

For instance, if you're making a one-time payment — such as a down payment on a house — you'll want to allocate for maximum liquidity, perhaps exclusively in cash equivalents such as CDs and T-bills that are scheduled to mature when you need the cash. However, the picture may change if you'll be drawing on the assets over a period of time — over the course of your child's college career, for instance. Then you may want to allocate the money you'll need up front in insured investments, and spread the rest among longer-term bonds, and perhaps even in some stock.

Keep in mind that a short-term allocation model will provide little, if any, insulation against the eroding effects of inflation and taxes on your portfolio over the long term.
 
Professor Roger IbbotsonProfessor Roger Ibbotson, Yale University, chairman and founder of Ibbotson Associates
         
   
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