| 3 Critical Mistakes | ||
Misguided Diversification
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While it is true that asset allocation is essential to maximizing risk reduction, few people truly have a properly diversified portfolio. That’s because some financial advisors, and many investors, think that asset allocation simply means owning a lot of different investments. It doesn’t. Keep this in |
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By adding more asset types, you begin to reduce risk at the portfolio level. Many financial planners diversify their client portfolios into stocks or mutual funds before understanding how these investments correlate to each other. Owning several different stocks or mutual funds is an example of horizontal diversification which reduces portfolio risk, but not substantially. Adding additional asset types that are not highly correlated is vital to accomplishing true portfolio diversification.