Investment Portfolio
For this client, the total investment is $100,000. This is not the sum total of the investor's assets, but it will be invested in a diversified portfolio. It is assumed that the time horizon is medium-to-long-term. The investment portfolio will be built using the top-down approach, whereby asset classes are first determined and then the individual securities within those classes are determined subsequent. The first step in this process is to determine the appropriate weights of the four asset classes -- cash, fixed income, U.S. equities and international securities -- as well as the objectives of the investor. The investor is generally risk neutral and does not anticipating needing this money for anything in particular.
Global Economic Situation
The first step is to determine the current U.S. economic situation. We will start with the stock markets. The current levels of the Dow Jones Industrial Average and NASDAQ are high. The Dow is at 16,421 at the time of writing, more than double the level it was at five years ago. The NASDAQ is at 4352, again well over double the level it was at five years (MSN Moneycentral, 2014). These are historic highs. However, it is worth considering two things. The first is that the stock market is considered to be a leading indicator, moving ahead of actual changes in the economy. The second is that the actual economy has not doubled in size in the past five years. The total size of the U.S. economy in 2009 was $14.4 trillion, and in 2012 it was $16.2 trillion, an increase of around 12.5% (World Bank, 2013). There is not a single economy in the world that has doubled in the past five years, though Iraq came close because of its oil and the fact that ten years ago it didn't have an economy. The moral of the story -- the market is pricing in growth that simply has not yet materialized. The question for the investor is whether that growth will ever materialize, or if the market is just enjoying a bubble fuelled by factors like quantitative easing.
The U.S. economy is presently growing at a rate of 2.4%, for the fourth quarter of 2013 (BEA.gov, 2014). This does not constitute a rate that will see the growth priced into the market come to fruition. Now, many U.S. companies have significant interest in international markets and higher rates of growth overseas might fuel stronger than average expectations for growth in Dow stocks, but the NASDAQ is a much broader index encompassing smaller companies and its growth the past five years has been even higher. It does not look like domestic stocks are particularly well-priced at this point in time. International stocks trading as ADRs are often multinationals, but there are some companies that are strictly tied to a country or region but have chosen to raise capital in the U.S. The point is that U.S. equities should be underweight right now. They are still on an upward trend, but the tapering of quantitative easing should slow growth - in fact that is the point of the policy (Spicer, Lopez & Jones, 2014). A market correction is in the cards, based on fundamentals.
Allocations
With respect to asset allocations, the reduction of stimulation in the U.S. markets, combine with the current overvaluation of equity assets, leads one to an asset allocation that is not oriented towards equities, since most of the gains in equities markets behind them. Furthermore, should the situation in Ukraine turn into a total debacle -- which it could -- that would have a strongly negative effect on the markets. Remember that this latest run-up has come during a time of relative peace and the world and that such times never seem to last forever.
With that in mind, fixed income is a good allocation to have as the main one. Here's the deal. Cash is pays next to nothing, and with an inflation rate of 1.6% it has a negative real return. So we don't want that. Fixed income does not generate much real return either, but it is safer than equities. The downside is that when rates go up, low-rate fixed income product will lose value. The investor will have to hold to recoup full value, so thankfully the investor does not need the money. U.S. equities are such poor value right now that it is hard to see...
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