VALUE LINE INVESTMENT EDUCATION: Planning an Investment Strategy
Planning an Investment Strategy
Many people get overwhelmed by the topic of investing
because they perceive it to be overly complex. On the sur-
face, this may seem to be true, but with a little time spent
on education and the right tools at your disposal, invest-
ing can be as simple or as consuming as you would like to
make it. One of the founding principles of Value Line was
to provide individual investors like yourself with the tools
to become better investors. When you choose stocks, Value
Line provides the guidance you need to make your selections.
APPROACHES TO INVESTING
There are many different approaches available to investors.
You could take on every aspect of the process from buying
stocks directly from the issuing companies (called direct
purchase plans) and bonds from the U.S. Treasury, OR
you could outsource everything by buying a single balanced
mutual fund or exchange-traded fund (ETF) that owns a
diversified collection of assets. Of course, there are countless
variations between the two extremes.
Value Line suggests that you find a happy medium that
allows you to enjoy the investing experience. After all, if
you don’t enjoy investing to some degree, it will become
a chore and, perhaps, eventually fall by the wayside. Since
you are the only person who can ensure your own financial
security, it is important that you don’t neglect this vital
aspect of your life.
To help keep things “fun,” it is advisable to focus on those
areas that you find enjoyable and outsource the other func-
tions. Outsourcing in this instance means paying someone
else to handle a portion of your portfolio or some function
of investing. For example, you probably don’t want to bother
with holding your own stock certificates or buying directly
from companies. In this case, you should use a broker. Ad-
ditionally, you may enjoy buying stocks but not bonds. If
this is the case, you should purchase individual stocks for
your portfolio, but buy a mutual fund or ETF that invests
in bonds to round out your portfolio and provide additional
diversification.
On the following pages, you will find a questionnaire de-
signed to aid you in determining your personal “investor
profile.” We’ve included descriptions for each of the nine
profiles in our model, which you should read to ensure that
the one you’ve been assigned fits your personal situation.
Your profile, in turn, fits into one of nine broadly diversified
portfolios. The general idea is simply to place your eggs in
many baskets so that dropping any one basket won’t do seri-
ous harm to your portfolio. We’ve created these portfolios
using historical performance and correlations (similarities
in price movements) between investment classes. It is im-
portant to remember, however, that historical performance
is not a guarantee of future returns; another way of looking
at it is to say that asset allocation is an art and not a science.
These are broad guidelines that you should feel free to alter
to your own situation.
For example, you may not want to segment your U.S.
equity investing. In this case, you would simply merge the
appropriate portions of the recommended portfolio (Large
Cap Growth, Large Cap Value, Small Cap Growth, and
Small Cap Value) to create one category for U.S. stocks.
The potential future gains or losses this might involve
will likely be negligible when compared to the emotional
benefits you will receive from simplifying your investment
approach to a level that suits your personality. It is better
that you should have “fun” than turn investing into an
easily neglectable chore.
That said, you should not compress things too much. The
broad categories that you should maintain in some fash-
ion include: U.S. Equities, Fixed Income Securities, and
at least one additional form of diversifying asset class (for
example, U.S. Small-Cap Value Stocks, Foreign Equities,
Foreign Bonds, Emerging Market Equities or Gold/Natural
Resources—note that we include real estate and real estate
investment trusts in the Gold/Natural Resources category).
While you could simply divide your portfolio into four equal
parts, 25% U.S. Equity, 25% Foreign Equity, 25% Fixed
Income, and 25% diversified assets, such as U.S. Small-Cap
Value or real estate investment trusts (REITs), this would
be a very aggressive portfolio that, while diversified, lacks
individualization—that is to say that it is a useful example,
but not likely appropriate for most investors.
Using the four equal parts of your portfolio as a model,
however, you might decide to handle the U.S. Equity por-
tion of your portfolio and the Small-Cap Value (or REIT,
if you chose that as your fourth asset class) segment using
The Value Line Investment Survey, while “outsourcing” the
rest by purchasing mutual funds you’ve selected utilizing
The Value Line Fund Advisor. This leaves you primarily re-
sponsible for the day-to-day management of just half your
portfolio. The other half would require just an annual or
semi-annual checkup.
How much of your portfolio to handle personally is your
decision. Our asset allocation model is open to any level of
personalization on this front. Again, the goal is to handle as
much as you feel comfortable with to ensure that you keep
up with your finances. If you find that you have taken on
too much, cut back. If you find that you want to do more,
take on more. The level of your involvement is up to you
and changeable at any moment. If we haven’t stressed this
enough already, the key is to make the investment process
engaging and enjoyable.
DIVERSIFYING AND MAINTAINING
YOUR PORTFOLIO
Assuming that you handle some portion of your portfolio,
it is important to discuss diversification. On a broad level,
owning securities from many different asset classes creates a
diversified portfolio—for example 25% U.S. Equities/25%
Foreign Equities/25% Fixed Income/25% Small-Cap Value
is diversified across four asset classes. However, on an asset
class level, you still need to think about diversification.
Using the same portfolio, you could fill in the asset classes
by purchasing just three stocks and one bond. This might
seem a ridiculous example, but it is important to point
out that owning one stock or bond per asset class does
not provide you with adequate diversification. (Note that,
generally speaking, mutual funds and ETFs are structured
to be diversified so that owning one would likely provide
adequate diversification within an asset class.)
It is advisable that you own at least 15 different securities
within a number of different industries (or maturities for
bonds) for whatever asset classes you choose to handle. For
example, if you were investing 25% of your assets in U.S.
Equities, Value Line recommends that you own 15 or more
stocks from at least 10 different industries. We include a
number of stock screens in the back of each Summary &
Index section in The Value Line Investment Survey that we
believe will provide a good starting point for any investor.
And our five Model Portfolios are another good place to
start. Further, we suggest that you equally weight the stocks
(at least at the time of purchase) and “rebalance” the posi-
tions in your portfolio at least annually. By rebalance, we
mean evening out your positions. It is a form of pushing
yourself to take some profits on winning positions and to
maintain diversification.
Rebalancing is an important aspect of asset allocation. You
should rebalance your entire portfolio back to your original
allocations (your “model” portfolio) at least once a year. It
is OK to do so more often, but not advisable to go much
longer than a year (for taxable accounts, securities with
gains should not be sold “just under” a year). That said, a
few percentage points here or there isn’t going to materially
alter your portfolio’s profile. So, if you were using a model
of 50% stocks and 50% bonds, being at 52% stocks and
48% bonds would not be a material deviation. The logic for
this is that you will be selling assets that have appreciated
in value and buying ones that have sold off — the old Wall
Street maxim of buying low and selling high.
Along with rebalancing, there is one more issue to consider
when maintaining your portfolio: changes in your own
life. At least every five years you should reexamine your
life situation to ensure that the model portfolio upon
which you have based your investments is still appropriate
to your current situation. Indeed, five years is a long time
and can be the difference between having children in school
and children who have started their own families. Such a
change could make a significant difference to your financial
life and would need to be addressed in your portfolio. In
fact, material life changes are a good reason to revisit your
portfolio structure any time they occur.
VALUE LINE INVESTMENT EDUCATION: Planning an Investment Strategy