GLOSSARY

asset allocation

Asset allocation refers to the process of splitting an investment portfolio among different asset classes. In practice, this means determining what percentage of a portfolio will be invested in equities, fixed income, cash and cash equivalents, and other assets. It is the structural decision that shapes how capital is distributed across categories that behave differently.

In portfolio construction, asset allocation investing begins with deciding how to apportion investments among stocks, bonds, and cash. Only after that allocation decision is made does security selection within each asset class follow. For financial professionals and RIAs, this sequencing matters. The allocation decision largely determines investment results, while individual holdings play a secondary role.

What are the 4 types of asset allocation?

There are several asset allotment strategies used in portfolio construction. While objectives, risk tolerance, and time horizon differ across investors, four common approaches appear frequently in investment management:

Strategic asset allocation

Strategic asset allocation establishes long-term policy weights designed for optimal balance between expected risk and return. Once set, the allocation generally remains stable and does not change in response to short-term economic conditions or market cycles.

This approach focuses on the characteristics of the overall portfolio rather than individual securities. It assumes that different asset classes offer returns that are not perfectly correlated. By combining fixed proportions, you achieve diversification and a predictable risk-return profile over time.

Strategic allocation is often implemented using passive vehicles such as mutual funds or a total stock market index fund paired with a broad bond fund. The goal is broad market exposure rather than active security selection.

Tactical asset allocation

Tactical asset allocation takes a more active approach. It allows for short-term tilts toward asset classes, sectors, or securities that appear to offer stronger expected gains. This strategy responds to market-cycle developments. During economic expansion, an investor may overweight equities. During downturns, the portfolio may shift toward bonds or cash equivalents to preserve capital.

Tactical allocation can move significantly away from core targets if the investor believes market conditions justify it. Because of this flexibility, tactical strategies often involve more frequent trading and active positioning compared to strategic allocation.

Dynamic asset allocation

Dynamic asset allocation also seeks an optimal long-term balance between risk and expected return. However, dynamic allocation continuously adjusts the asset mix according to economic environment changes. Instead of holding fixed percentages, the allocation evolves as market conditions shift.

This model acknowledges that economic growth, contraction, and policy changes can influence asset classes. Dynamic asset allocation may adjust equity, bond, or alternative exposure gradually as conditions change, rather than making abrupt tactical shifts.

Core-satellite approach

The core-satellite strategy combines elements of strategic and active allocation. The "core" represents the largest portion of the portfolio and typically consists of broad, diversified investments designed to capture market beta. These may include large-cap domestic equities, global equities, and high-quality government bonds.

The "satellite" portion represents a smaller allocation used for more active or opportunistic strategies. Satellite positions may include sector-specific equities, emerging market equities, high-yield bonds, private equity, real estate, commodities, or other alternative investments. This allows investors to maintain a stable strategic foundation while seeking incremental return through targeted allocations.

Each of these asset allocation strategies reflects a different philosophy about market efficiency, economic responsiveness, and risk management. The appropriate model depends on financial goals, time horizons, and risk tolerance.

What is the golden rule of asset allocation?

The golden rule of asset allocation is simple: align your portfolio with your financial goals and manage it with discipline over the long term. However, it can be demanding in practice. Asset allocation is not about chasing the hottest sector or reacting to short-term headlines. It is about establishing a structured mix of asset classes that reflect risk tolerance, investment horizon, and objectives.

Align allocation with financial goals

Every allocation decision begins with clearly defined financial goals. Whether the objective is retirement income, capital growth, or capital preservation, the percentage assigned to asset classes must reflect the time horizon and tolerance for uncertainty.

Asset allotment is the implementation of a strategy that adjusts the percentage of each asset according to risk tolerance, objectives, and timeframe. A portfolio designed for long-term growth will typically carry greater exposure to equities. A portfolio supporting near-term spending needs may lean more heavily toward bonds and cash equivalents. The allocation must match the purpose of the capital.

Maintain discipline

One of the most important principles in asset allocation is "rules over views." Market views are opinions about future outcomes. They are influenced by assumptions, conditioning, and recent experience. A rule-based allocation framework grounded in defined parameters is more durable than reacting to forecasts.

Behavioral biases often interfere with disciplined investing. Investors may overreact to recent returns, display overconfidence, or allow loss aversion to drive decisions. A structured allocation helps remove emotion from portfolio construction. By following predetermined allocation rules, you avoid shifting strategy based solely on market sentiment.

Rebalance consistently

Even a well-designed allocation can drift over time. When one asset class outperforms, its weight in the portfolio increases. For example, a 60 percent equity allocation may rise to 80 percent after a strong bull market. This drift changes the portfolio's risk profile and may no longer align with the original financial goals.

Rebalancing restores the intended allocation. You can rebalance by selling overweight assets and reallocating to underweight ones. Some advisors rebalance at set intervals while others act when allocations move beyond a predetermined threshold.

Avoid emotional market timing

Asset allotment should not be driven by last year's returns. Trying to time the market by shifting entirely into what has recently performed well increases the risk of buying high and selling low. Tactical adjustments may be justified, but wholesale allocation changes based on short-term performance undermine discipline.

Strategic allocation encourages stability during volatility. It helps you stay invested through market cycles rather than reacting to temporary swings. Here are some opinions on how allocation should be approached:

Get more information on how advisors and RIAs use asset allocation to provide better outcomes in our practice management news section.

Do not put all your eggs in one basket

The timeless principle "do not put all your eggs in one basket" captures the essence of diversification within asset allocation. Allocating 100 percent of capital to a single asset class exposes a portfolio to concentration risk. By spreading investments across stocks, bonds, cash, and potentially other assets, you increase the probability that some holdings will perform satisfactorily even if others decline.

Correlation matters. Asset classes that move differently from one another can reduce overall variability for a given level of expected return. A diversified allocation across less correlated assets helps manage risk while pursuing growth.

In practice, the golden rule of asset allocation combines alignment, discipline, diversification, and consistent rebalancing. When you ground portfolio decisions in financial goals, resist emotional shifts, and maintain a diversified structure, asset allotment becomes a durable framework.

Asset allocation for retirement income and decumulation

Retirement changes the role of your investment portfolio. During working years, asset allocation emphasizes growth. In retirement, the focus shifts toward generating income, preserving capital, and sustaining purchasing power. The portfolio is no longer supported by a paycheck. Instead, it becomes the primary source of funding for living expenses.

Shifting from growth to capital preservation

Before retirement, investors often maintain a higher allocation to equities for capital appreciation. Once retirement begins, that structure evolves. Growth assets such as stocks remain important for inflation protection, but they now share priority with bonds and cash that reduce volatility and support withdrawals.

Asset allocation in retirement is, therefore, a recalibration. The goal is not to eliminate equities but to balance growth exposure with stability. A portfolio must serve three purposes simultaneously: generate income, preserve value, and maintain enough growth to offset inflation over decades.

Sample allocation patterns often reflect this shift.

  • In early retirement, a balanced mix such as 60 percent equities, 35 percent bonds, and 5 percent cash may help maintain growth while supporting income
  • Over time, allocations may gradually move toward greater stability, such as 40 percent equities, 50 percent bonds, and 10 percent cash in later years
  • In advanced retirement stages, a more conservative structure such as 25 percent equities, 55 percent bonds, and 20 percent cash may prioritize capital preservation and liquidity

Here's some input on how to allocate assets based on the age of the investor:

Increasing allocation to bonds and cash

Bonds and fixed income typically anchor a retirement portfolio. High-quality government and corporate bonds can provide predictable income and reduce the impact of equity market fluctuations. Bond ladders, which stagger maturities over time may help manage interest-rate risk.

Cash and cash equivalents also play a distinct role. Holding one to three years of essential expenses in cash or short-term instruments can reduce the need to sell stocks during market downturns. However, excessive cash can erode purchasing power over time due to inflation. The balance must reflect spending needs, other income sources, and risk tolerance.

Annuities, certificates of deposit, and pensions may function similarly to bonds by providing dependable income. These instruments can support essential expenses, allowing discretionary spending to be funded from more variable sources such as market-based investments.

Managing withdrawal risk

Withdrawal risk becomes central in decumulation. Early retirement withdrawals, especially during periods of market decline can have lasting effects on portfolio sustainability. Research shows that selling stocks early in retirement when markets are falling can permanently impair a portfolio's ability to recover.

A commonly referenced guideline suggests withdrawing no more than 4 percent or 5 percent of retirement savings in the first year, then adjusting that amount annually for inflation. This approach aims to balance income needs with portfolio longevity. Covering essential expenses with more stable income sources can reduce pressure on the investment portfolio during volatile periods.

Sequence risk awareness

Sequence risk is the order in which investment returns happen. Poor returns early in retirement can have a disproportionate effect because withdrawals reduce the portfolio base before recovery begins. Even if average long-term returns remain reasonable, an unfavorable sequence can shorten portfolio life.

Asset allocation helps manage this risk. Maintaining sufficient exposure to bonds and cash reduces the need to sell equities during downturns. At the same time, retaining some equity exposure is critical. Historically, stocks have delivered positive returns over long holding periods, and growth assets help offset inflation over extended retirements that may last decades.

Balancing income needs with long term sustainability

Retirement asset allotment must align with investment goals that extend well beyond the first few years of retirement. Inflation compounds quietly and even modest increases in prices can double living costs over a 20-year horizon. Maintaining some growth exposure supports purchasing power.

At the same time, stability reduces anxiety during volatile periods. A diversified mix across stocks, bonds, and cash supplemented by bond ladders or annuities can provide structure and predictability.

Ultimately, asset allotment for retirement income and decumulation is about balance. You aim to preserve capital, generate dependable income, and maintain growth potential for the long term. When properly aligned with financial objectives and regularly reviewed, the allocation framework can help support sustainable withdrawals without sacrificing future security.

Asset allocation: The bigger picture

A well-constructed allocation does more than seek growth. It manages portfolio risk, controls drawdowns, and reduces the impact of behavioral mistakes. Rebalancing reinforces this discipline by preventing drift and restoring intended exposure levels. Without that structure, even a diversified portfolio can gradually become misaligned with its original objectives.

Read the latest news on asset allocation from InvestmentNews!

Displaying 331 results
Buy, sell or hold Bitcoin? Advisors weigh in after crypto's recent collapse
ALTERNATIVES NOV 18, 2025
Buy, sell or hold Bitcoin? Advisors weigh in after crypto's recent collapse

The drop in Bitcoin prices over the past month has wealth managers answering client questions about their strategy for this risky asset.

Donor-advised funds will be big winners after strong 2025 stock performance
Donor-advised funds will be big winners after strong 2025 stock performance

Advisors are expecting a big year for charitable giving after the stock market's phenomenal rise this year.

Why now is the best time I’ve seen in 25 Years for creating “tax alpha”
EXPERT ADVICE NOV 13, 2025
Why now is the best time I’ve seen in 25 Years for creating “tax alpha”

Darnel Bentz shares why now is the most promising time in 25 years to create "tax alpha" through proactive, tax-efficient portfolio management. Drawing on decades of experience, Bentz explains how evolving strategies and legislative awareness can help clients minimize tax burdens and grow wealth sustainably.

Which 529 savings plans set the gold standard in 2025?
Which 529 savings plans set the gold standard in 2025?

Morningstar analysis reveals top five picks as assets in education savings plans cross a key $500-billion milestone.

How preferred stock tool keeps advisors alert
FIXED INCOME NOV 11, 2025
How preferred stock tool keeps advisors alert

Advisors are competing with low-cost ETF bundles and under pressure to show value, but BNK Invest believes it has the ideal solution to capitalize on an under appreciated security.

Just 6 in 10 feel secure about retirement, require smarter, tailored planning advice
Just 6 in 10 feel secure about retirement, require smarter, tailored planning advice

Rising financial anxiety adds to need for custom solutions, report urges.

How did pension funds and other institutions position their portfolios for success in Q3?
EQUITIES OCT 31, 2025
How did pension funds and other institutions position their portfolios for success in Q3?

Rate cuts and sectoral successes helped boost returns in the third quarter.

Cetera debuts model portfolios for affluent to HNW clients
Cetera debuts model portfolios for affluent to HNW clients

The six models, offered in partnership with Envestnet, are designed to help advisors manage affluent and institutional client relationships.

Financial advisors split by client base on impact of government shutdown
Financial advisors split by client base on impact of government shutdown

Advisors with clients directly affected by the shutdown are fielding more client calls, while those unimpacted by it have yet to see significant concern.

Sowell taps Rayliant for exclusive partnership, names Jason Hsu as chief investment strategist
Sowell taps Rayliant for exclusive partnership, names Jason Hsu as chief investment strategist

It deepens the RIAs OCIO capabilities with research-driven approach and global expertise.

Volatility over U.S.-China trade war has advisors navigating headline risk
Volatility over U.S.-China trade war has advisors navigating headline risk

Tensions over trade between the two superpowers is keeping wealth managers on their toes.

Best Wealth Managers & Advisors Under 40 in the USA | Rising Stars
BEST IN WEALTH OCT 13, 2025
Best Wealth Managers & Advisors Under 40 in the USA | Rising Stars

America's best wealth managers and advisors under 40 underline how connecting with and understanding clients is the true difference maker

Ex-Dolphins star gets $9.5 million settlement from Merrill over ex-broker charged with grand theft, fraud
WIREHOUSES OCT 08, 2025
Ex-Dolphins star gets $9.5 million settlement from Merrill over ex-broker charged with grand theft, fraud

Isaiah Williams, 33, was arrested in Florida in June for his alleged involvement in the theft of almost $2.6 million from Reshad Jones, a former Miami Dolphins safety.

Advisors' equity recommendations often exceed client preferences, study finds
EQUITIES OCT 01, 2025
Advisors' equity recommendations often exceed client preferences, study finds

But clients' actual stock allocations closely matched advisors' recommendations, which generally fall in line with models in target-date funds.

Forgotten 401(k)s hit record $2.1T as job insecurity leaves retirement savings stranded
Forgotten 401(k)s hit record $2.1T as job insecurity leaves retirement savings stranded

Amid layoffs and economic anxiety, left-behind retirement accounts reach new highs with millions of Americans disconnected from their savings.