What's the most conservative split of financial assets for my portfolio in today's market?
Mid 30's, looking for what split I should have between Australian shares, International shares, property, cash, interest, bonds, options, etc. or maybe none of the above. What is considered to be a "safe" ratio and what are the slices of this pie made up of?
Updating according to request from Answerers, sorry these factors are obviously critical to answering the question, not my area of expertise (clearly :) ).
Income = 100K pa
Wealth = approx. 350K existing investments (50% blue chip aussie shares/50% term deposit)
Expenses = none
Job Security = contractor, but my industry has a deficit of workers.
time horizon (i.e. when will you need the money) = when i retire at 60ish, although I probably need 200k i guess in the next 6 months to buy an investment property. Although perhaps I should post a seperate question about what level(%) of debt to take on when property investing this would determine how much capital I should keep for the investment.
No dedicated Emergency fund: thanks for that advice I will build one.
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You don't say your level of consumer debt. You don't say how much of an emergency fund you have.
If you have debt, pay it off before you invest. If you don't have an emergency fund (X months' expenses, pick your own X) get that before investing.
If you have neither, get a small emergency fund, and then throw as much as you can to getting rid of debt.
Beyond that, look for prudent investments. They're not the same as conservative investments.
To know what's prudent, learn about the ones you listed and what determines their prices. Learn how or why they go up or down in value.
The safest place to put money is a mixture of cash, local municipal bond funds with average durations under two years and US Treasury bond funds with short durations.
Examples of good short term US municipal funds:
VIPSX (US Government TIPS inflation protected bonds)
VFSTX (Short Term Investor Grade bond fund)
I'm not an active investor in Australian securities, so I won't recommend anything specific. Because rates are so low right now, you want a short duration (ie. funds where the average bond matures in < 2 years) fund to protect against increased rates.
The problem with safety is that you won't make any money. If your goal to grow the value of your investment while minimizing risk, you need to look at equities. The portfolios posted by justkt are a great place to start.
If you can afford the time and are looking for more deep, and fun, investment tips, check out gurufocus.com. Great for more fundamental analysis of "Intelligent Investor" type Benjamin Graham-style businesses.
No use scatter-shooting the stock exchange hoping to find good value businesses. Even blue-chips have an increasingly uncertain future (except IMHO certain world dominators like KO, WMT, XO and MCD).
This is a somewhat complicated question because it really depends on your personal situation. For example, the following parameters might impact your optimal asset allocation:
Income
Wealth
Expenses
Job Security
time horizon (i.e. when will you need the money)
If you need the money before 3 years, I would suggest keeping almost all of it in cash, CDs, Treasuries, and ultra safe short-term corporate bonds.
If however, you have a longer time horizon (and since you're in your 30s you would ideally have decades) you should diversify by investing in many different asset classes. This includes Australian equity, international equity, foreign and domestic debt, commodities, and real estate. Since you have such a long time horizon market timing is not that important.
Before investing, absolutely follow the advice in mbhunter's answer.
There is no safe investment (unless you count your mattress, and even there you could find moths, theives, or simple inflation taking a chunk out of your change). There is only maximizing your reward for a given level of risk - and there is always risk.
This question should be enshrined somewhere on the Q&A site for its comprehensive list of sources for information on asset allocation. The tag is also going to have tons of good information for you.
To answer your question on what slice of the pie is devoted to what, you can check out some common portfolios given by U. S. experts for U. S. investors - these should be convertible into Australian funds.
Couch Potato
Bogleheads
All About Asset Allocation
The Intelligent Asset Allocator
A Random Walk Down Wall Street
FundAdvice.com
Unconventional Success
Ben Stein
Another portfolio that is, like all those above, loosely based on Modern Portfolio Theory for maximizing reward for a given level of risk is the Gone Fishin' Portfolio.
A common denominator amongst these portfolios is that they emphasize index funds over mutual funds for their long-term performance and preference lazy management (yearly rebalancing is a common suggestion as the maximum level of involvement) over active management. You can see more Lazy Portfolios.
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