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ASSET
ALLOCATION SOFTWARE
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Summary: Our investment strategy for minimising risk and maximising returns in global
portfolios
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Theory versus Practice In
theory five basic principles should dominate both strategic and tactical asset allocation
decisions in pension plan management. In practice the defined contribution pension plan
(a.k.a. money purchase pension scheme) of most vendors doesn't enable the investor to live
by those principles. You can see here how to decide for yourself using our asset
allocation software for your own pension plan.
- In theory, the key consideration in strategic asset allocation, the balance of investment
objectives within any pension scheme should shift from growth to income over the
working lifetime of an pension plan holder. In practice, most vendors offer only a single one-size-fits-all managed fund to investors of all ages in
their defined contribution plans.
- In theory, considerations of capital preservation in
a portfolio should reflect the financial circumstances of each investor. In practice,
sales and compliance pressures push many Independent Financial Advisers ( IFA ) to
recommend the default option which is the managed fund. This applies the same risk profile
to all holders in money purchase schemes. Similar factors also operate in other countries.
- In theory, the principal issue in tactical asset
allocation within any individual pension plan, the choice of shares,
bonds or cash should be adjusted in the light of market circumstances. In practice,
few fund managers do much more than tinker at the margins.
- In theory, the second concern of tactical asset
allocation, the geographical
composition of holdings within each asset class in any pension plan should reflect
changes in the comparative attractiveness of different regions of the world at
different times. In practice, few fund managers of managed funds will go as far as to
reduce holdings to zero in any region that they find unattractive.
- In theory, a growing third tactical asset allocation consideration among fund managers
is the emphasis on different investment styles
as the market climate changes. In practice, performance measurement services rate
consistency highly, so many managers stick with a particular style irrespective of market
conditions, so investors in defined contribution pension plans are often denied choice of
styles even when they do have a geographical choice.
- In theory, diversification is a good thing. In practice one can have too much of a good
thing, as the benefits of increasing diversification decline with every additional equity
asset held in a portfolio.
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Explanation
Find your age along the horizontal scale, and check off the recommended proportion of
shares versus bonds along the vertical scale at your chosen risk profile. |
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In theory, at the start of one's career one should
invest in equities for growth but at retirement invest in fixed interest securities for
income. This implies that one should steadily switch from equities into fixed income
investments over an earning career.

In practice, this table shows how you can adjust the
proportions of stocks and shares yourself. When starting a career around the age of 20,
growth is the sole objective, so equities can represent all of fund. However on
retirement, and by law in the United Kingdom at the age of 75, your pension fund must be
converted into an annuity, to provide an guarranteeedd income for the rest of your life,
which is done by capital repayment and interest earned on long dated government bonds.
Hence the balance of a typical fund might start by containing 100% equities and end with
100% fixed interest investments. You should adjust
that in the light of market circumstances. |

If you want, we can act as
your Independent Financial Adviser |
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2. Risk Profile In theory, individual circumstances differ, so it may be acceptable
for investors in some money purchase pension schemes to strike the balance at a higher
level of higher risk and return, shown as the green line,
while others may be better advised to go for a more conservative approach, shown as the red line, while the typical position is shown as
the yellow line.
In practice, the right balance for any particular
defined contributions pension plan will therefore depend not only on age, but also on
income, outgoings and other assets. Here is a crude way of providing some guidance using a
self-assessment questionaire on these key considerations. If you score 24 or more, the
higher risk profile may be acceptable, but if your score is 12 or less, it would probably
be prudent to adopt the lower risk profile.
| Employment |
Outgoings |
Assets |
| Salaried
Employee |
10 |
Single |
10 |
Substantial
Portfolio |
10 |
| Partner/Proprietor |
8 |
Double
Income No Kids |
8 |
Second
Home |
8 |
| Self-Employed |
6 |
Family
< 2.5 Kids |
6 |
>
66% Home Equity |
6 |
| Unemployed |
4 |
Family
> 2.5 Kids |
4 |
>
33% Home Equity |
4 |
| Retired |
2 |
Single
Parent |
2 |
Don't
own a home |
2 |
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Tune the balance of Shares, Bonds or Cash according to market
conditions
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3. Shares, Bonds or Cash In theory, the balance you strike within your individual
pension plan should also fluctuate around this norm depending on market conditions. Investors RouteMap, our tactical asset
allocation software, applies a range of multi-disciplinary active quantitative strategies
to generate Buy/Sell ratings on each asset class both globally and within the home market
for investors in all the major developed countries and many emerging markets.
In practice, we believe that it is asset allocation,
rather than the choice of manager that counts as this is predictable - not entirely, but
at least with a useful degree of accuracy. Our asset allocation software has been
back-tested, where possible, over a quarter of a century for all the countries and regions
included in the RouteMaps. Our research shows that there are some strategies that work in a
wide variety of conditions and over long time periods in most places. |



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4.
Geographical Asset Allocation In theory, pension plan portfolios should be
constantly adjusted in anticipation of changes in growth, inflation, yields and exchange
rates between regions. In practice few fund managers do much more than tinker around at the margins.
In practice, subscribers to the Investors RouteMaps can use
our asset allocation software to analyse markets not only in absolute terms but also
relative to each other using the Global View charts which show relative performance charts
that include our computer-generated Best Guess as to the future direction of each market.
Every month these recommendations are reviewed and published in summary tables. |
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5.
Investment Styles
In theory, certain investment styles work consistently for certain fund managers, at
least according to the performance charts often used to advertise funds. In practice, past performance is a poor guide for choosing
fund managers, because styles go in and out of fashion. The latest addition of our
range of asset allocation software, the Styles
RouteMap shows what worked in the past and what we expect to work in the future, based
on our technical and fundamental research of the six most popular kinds of investment
style and sector funds. |
Further Reading
More to
risk than volatility
Dynamic Diversification |
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6.
Dynamic Diversification In theory, portfolio theorists believe that
diversification reduces risk. However there is more
to risk than volatility. Furthermore there is little gain from diversification into
assets with high levels of price
correlation. In practice, all that wide diversification ensures is a committment to
mediocrity as such a portfolio cannot avoid containing under-performing assets. In
technical tems, there is a trade off between alpha (performance) and beta (volatility).
Instead a strategy of dynamic diversification may be preferable - switching between a
small selection of poorly-correlated equity assets with better prospects, as recommended
to subscribers of the RouteMaps. |

Next Class
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Asset Allocation is part of the
free international investment seminar. Just follow the classroom signs alongside. At the
end of each class, there is a sign to the beginning of the Next Class. You can join the classes at
any stage, but logically, it is best to start at the top of this page which is the
beginning of the series. If our use of English is not plain enough, you can check out key
words and concepts in Alphabet Soup
and Jargon. |
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