Investment Planning
Good investment planning can turn your
goals from dreams into realities. This planning involves more than trying
to pick the "right" investments. How you allocate your money among different
types of investments can have a greater effect on investment success than
the individual investments you choose. So, your first step in investing
toward your goals is to work out an asset allocation for your investments.
Asset Allocation
Very simply, asset
allocation is the process of deciding what percentage
of your money to put in the different investment classes: stocks, bonds,
money market, and other investments, such as real estate. Your asset allocation
will depend on your investment time frame, your savings goal, and how much
risk you are willing to take to achieve that goal.
Diversification
After you decide on an asset allocation,
the next step is to diversify your money within the different investment
classes. By putting your money in numerous different investments, you spread
the risk - rather than invest in one stock, you might invest in a variety
of stocks. That way, if one stock performs poorly, it represents a smaller
portion of your overall stock portfolio.
Before you can set an asset
allocation and diversify your investments, though, you need to know
more about the choices that are available.
1. Stocks
Investing in stocks gives you an
ownership interest in the corporation issuing the stock. If the corporation
does well, your investment should do well. If not, you could lose some
(or all) of your money. The advantages of investing in stocks include the
potential for higher returns over time than those offered by most other
investments and returns that historically have outpaced inflation. Both
of these advantages make stock investments an appropriate part of a portfolio
designed to achieve long-term investment goals.
2. Bonds
Bonds and other fixed-income investments
pay a set income over a set term. At the end of the term, the amount you
have invested is returned to you. Fixed-income investments offer a steady
income stream and historically less volatile price fluctuations than stock
investments. But fixed-income investments aren't without risk. Sometimes
a bond issuer, for example, can run into financial difficulties, default
on its bonds, and not be able to return the face amount of the bonds to
investors.
Also, bond prices move up and down,
largely in reaction to interest-rate swings. Thus, investors in bond mutual
funds, as well as investors in individual bonds who don't plan on holding
them until maturity, face the possible risk of losing principal.
3. Money Market Investments
Like fixed-income investments, money
market investments pay a defined income over a set term. (The income may
be fixed or variable.) The advantage of money market investments is that
many of them are backed by the Malaysian government, so return of your
principal is practically guaranteed. This makes money market investments
an attractive choice for investors with short-term goals. The major disadvantage
of this investment class is that the investments historically have not
produced returns much greater than the inflation rate.
4. Mutual Funds / Investment Linked
Funds
Mutual funds
or investment linked funds are one of the most
popular ways to invest. With an investment fund, your money is pooled with
that of other investors to purchase a variety of securities (stocks and/or
bonds). The fund is professionally managed as a single investment account.
Investment funds offer you automatic diversification because each
fund invests in numerous different securities. When you buy units in a
mutual fund, for example, you are actually buying an investment in the
stocks of many different companies. If one company or industry has a problem,
the fund will be less likely to suffer a major loss because it is diversified.
You can choose from various of stock,
bond, balanced (stocks and bonds), and money market mutual funds. Each
fund is managed toward a particular investment objective, such as growth,
income, or asset preservation. The mutual fund's prospectus will explain
the fund's investment objective and tell you what types of securities the
fund can hold.
Investment Return
When choosing investments, potential
return is a key consideration. The higher your return, the faster your
investments will grow and the sooner you will reach your goal. But be aware
that the annual percentage returns and yields you see published in ads,
prospectuses, and articles don't take into account inflation or taxes,
two factors you need to consider in your investment planning. And the higher
the potential returns also mean a higher investment risk.
Risk Tolerance
You also need to weigh an investment's
risk. Generally, the more risk involved with an investment, the higher
its potential return. Consequently, the more risk you are willing to take,
the more potential your savings have to grow over the long term. Before
choosing an investment, you should make sure you understand the investment,
the risk it carries, and how that risk relates to your investment goal.
For instance, if you are investing
for your two-year-old child's college education, you can probably afford
to assume more risk in your investing than someone whose child will begin
college in two or three years. With more than 15 years before you'll need
your money, you should have time to make up any short-term losses your
investments may experience. Of course, there can be no assurance that any
losses will be made up in a 15-year time period.
Short-term investments, such as money
market funds, offer the least risk. Fixed-income investments offer potentially
higher returns with added risk. Stock investments offer the highest potential
returns with the greatest amount of risk. A combination of money market,
fixed-income, and stock investments can provide potentially higher returns
than either money market or fixed-income investments alone, with only slightly
greater risk.
As you near your goal, your risk
tolerance may drop and you may want to change your asset allocation.
Protecting and preserving your savings might become more important. You
may be willing to give up the growth potential of most of your long-term
investments in favor of the greater security offered by short-term investments.
Modern Portfolio Theory
The above is part of the application of Modern
Portfolio Theory, a sound method for many investors to establish a
disciplined approach to investing.
When you put all this together, it's
entirely possible to build a portfolio that has much higher average return
than the level of risk it contains. So when you build a diversified portfolio
and spread out your investments by asset class, you're really just managing
risk and return. |