Center Investing

Diversification - 1st Quarter 2012

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Our recent blog post titled “Death of Diversification?” noted that 2011 was an exceptionally poor year for diversified investment positions. You may ask what we meant by diversified. For our purposes, we were referring to asset classes that are not US stocks as measured by the S&P 500 and US bonds as measured by the BarCap Aggregate Bond indexes. 

A similar, although altogether more painful time period was 2008 where all but the most risk-averse assets were in free-fall. Past performance does not predict future returns, but history has a funny way of rhyming. In 2009, as markets determined the world was not ending, diversified portfolios were richly rewarded.

January’s returns offer a peek into the behavior of markets coming out of a period where diversification has not worked.

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In the chart above we compare US Stocks & US Bonds to common diversifiers. This illustrates (on an admittedly smaller scale) another inflection point for diversification where additional asset classes contributed positively to returns similar to the time period starting in March 2009.

The jury is out as to whether this period favoring diversification will sustain itself through 2012. At some point the diversification ship will right itself and reward investors that hang on with variety’s smoothing effect.

* Large Cap Stocks – S&P 500, International Stocks – MSCI EAFE NR USD, Small Cap Stocks – Russell 2000, Commodities – Morgan Stanley Commodity-Related, US Bonds – BarCap US Aggregate, Global Bonds – BarCap Global Aggregate, High Yield Bonds – BarCap Corporate High Yield.

Benefits of Process - 1st Quarter 2012

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Investors are prone to periods of underperformance regardless of strategy. The response to underperformance is an important consideration for the investor's future success. Nobel Prize winning behavioral psychologist points to process:

"Organizations are better than individuals when it comes to avoiding errors, because they naturally think more slowly and have the power to impose orderly procedures." ~ Thinking, Fast and Slow, Daniel Kahneman, 2011.

At Center for Financial Planning, we have an investment committee dedicated to upholding the very processes that hedge us as investors from common pitfalls while maintaining customized financial planning solutions for each client's unique situation. There are checks and balances so that changes for investments don't occur willy-nilly. Parameters anticipating discussion of process change are documented within our written procedure. Please click here to read the full post at Money Centered.

The information contained in this report does not purport to be a complete description of the securities, markets, or developments referred to in this material.  Any information is not a complete summary or statement of all available data necessary for making an investment decision and does not constitute a recommendation.  Any opinions are those of Center for Financial Planning, Inc., and not necessarily those of RJFS or Raymond James.