Studies show asset allocation determines 90%+ of portfolio returns variance. Your specific stock picks matter far less than your overall stocks-vs-bonds mix. Get this right, and everything else falls into place.
What Is Asset Allocation?
Asset allocation is how you divide your portfolio among different asset classes: stocks, bonds, real estate, cash, commodities, etc. The most fundamental decision is stocks vs bonds.
| Asset Class | Expected Return | Volatility | Purpose |
|---|---|---|---|
| Stocks | 10% long-term average | High (can drop 50%+) | Growth |
| Bonds | 4-6% long-term average | Low to Moderate | Stability, Income |
| Cash | 0-5% (interest rates) | Minimal | Safety, Liquidity |
| Real Estate | 8-10% (includes rent) | Moderate | Income, Inflation hedge |
Asset Allocation by Age
Traditional "Age Rule"
Formula: Bond allocation = Your age
Example: 30 years old = 30% bonds, 70% stocks
Modern Adjustment (longer lifespans): Bond allocation = Your age - 10 or - 20
Example: 30 years old = 10-20% bonds, 80-90% stocks
| Age | Conservative | Moderate | Aggressive |
|---|---|---|---|
| 20s | 80/20 (stocks/bonds) | 90/10 | 100/0 |
| 30s | 75/25 | 85/15 | 95/5 |
| 40s | 70/30 | 80/20 | 90/10 |
| 50s | 60/40 | 70/30 | 80/20 |
| 60s | 50/50 | 60/40 | 70/30 |
| 70+ | 40/60 | 50/50 | 60/40 |
The Three-Fund Portfolio
Popularized by Bogleheads, this simple allocation provides global diversification:
- Total US Stock Market Index (e.g., VTSAX): 50-70%
- Total International Stock Index (e.g., VTIAX): 20-30%
- Total Bond Market Index (e.g., VBTLX): 10-30%
Example Allocations
Age 30 (Aggressive)
- 60% US Stocks
- 30% International Stocks
- 10% Bonds
Age 45 (Moderate)
- 55% US Stocks
- 25% International Stocks
- 20% Bonds
Age 60 (Conservative)
- 45% US Stocks
- 20% International Stocks
- 35% Bonds
Rebalancing: Keeping Your Allocation on Track
Over time, winners grow larger and losers shrink, throwing off your target allocation. Rebalancing means selling winners and buying losers to restore targets.
Rebalancing Methods
- Calendar-based: Rebalance once/year (simple, tax-efficient)
- Threshold-based: Rebalance when allocation drifts 5%+ from target
- Contribution-based: Direct new contributions to underweight assets (most tax-efficient)
Rebalancing Example
Target: 70% stocks / 30% bonds ($100K portfolio = $70K stocks, $30K bonds)
After 1 year: Stocks grew 20%, bonds grew 5%
- Stocks: $70K → $84K (73.7% of portfolio)
- Bonds: $30K → $31.5K (27.3% of portfolio)
Rebalance action: Sell $4,200 in stocks, buy $4,200 in bonds to restore 70/30
Result: You're selling high (stocks) and buying low (bonds) automatically—the essence of successful investing!
Geographic Diversification
Don't put all eggs in one country's basket:
| Allocation | US Stocks | International Developed | Emerging Markets |
|---|---|---|---|
| Home Bias (common) | 70% | 25% | 5% |
| Market Weight | 60% | 30% | 10% |
| Equal Weight | 50% | 40% | 10% |
Risk Tolerance vs Risk Capacity
Risk Tolerance: How much volatility can you emotionally handle?
Risk Capacity: How much risk can you afford based on timeline and financial situation?
Example: 25-year-old with high risk tolerance but saving for house in 3 years = low risk capacity → conservative allocation for house fund.
Common Asset Allocation Mistakes
1 Too Conservative Too Young
20-year-old in 50/50 portfolio misses decades of compound growth. Young investors should embrace volatility.
2 Too Aggressive Near Retirement
60-year-old in 100% stocks risks devastating losses right before needing the money. Preserve capital as retirement approaches.
3 Never Rebalancing
Portfolio drifts from 70/30 to 90/10 over years, taking on much more risk than intended.
4 Rebalancing Too Frequently
Monthly rebalancing triggers unnecessary taxes and transaction costs. Annual is sufficient.
Target-Date Funds: Automatic Asset Allocation
Target-date funds automatically adjust allocation as you age—set it and forget it.
Example: Vanguard Target Retirement 2060
- 2025 (35 years out): 90% stocks / 10% bonds
- 2045 (15 years out): 75% stocks / 25% bonds
- 2060 (retirement): 50% stocks / 50% bonds
- 2070+ (10 years post-retirement): 30% stocks / 70% bonds
Pros: Automatic, professional management, simple
Cons: Slightly higher fees than DIY, one-size-fits-all approach
Tax-Efficient Asset Location
Beyond allocation, WHERE you hold assets matters for taxes:
| Account Type | Best Assets to Hold | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Taxable Brokerage | Tax-efficient stock index funds, muni bonds | Qualified dividends taxed at 0-20% (vs ordinary income) |
| Traditional IRA/401(k) | Bonds, REITs, high-dividend stocks | Ordinary income transformed into deferred gains |
| Roth IRA | Highest growth potential stocks, international | All gains 100% tax-free forever |