- Tax Planning
- Investments 1: Before you Invest
- Introduction
- Know the Steps You Should Take Before You Invest
- Recognize the Ten Principles of Successful Investing
- Principle 1: Know Yourself
- Principle 2: Understand Risk
- Principle 3: Stay Diversified
- Principle 4: Invest Low-Cost and Tax-Efficiently
- Principle 5: Invest for the Long Run
- Principle 6: Use Caution if You Are Investing in Individual Assets
- Principle 7: Monitor Portfolio Performance Against Benchmarks
- Principle 8: Do Not Waste Too Much Time and Energy Trying to Beat the Market
- Principle 9: Invest Only with High-Quality, Licensed, Reputable People and Institutions
- Principle 10: Develop a Good Investment Plan and Follow It Closely
- Understand the Risks and Benefits of the Major Asset Classes
- Understand the Risk and Return History of the Major Asset Classes
- Summary
- Assignments
- Investments 2: Your Investment Plan
- Investments 3: Securities Market Basics
- Investments 4: Bond Basics
- Investments 5: Stock Basics
- Investments 6: Mutual Fund Basics
- Investments 7: Building Your Portfolio
- Investments 8: Picking Financial Assets
- Investments 9: Portfolio Rebalancing and Reporting
- Retirement 1: Basics
- Retirement 2: Social Security
- Retirement 3: Employer Qualified Plans
- Retirement 4: Individual and Small Business Plans
- Estate Planning Basics
Principle 3: Stay Diversified
Diversification is your best defense against risk. You should invest in a variety of assets and asset classes. Diversification does not mean investing in ten different banks. It means investing in different companies, industries, and perhaps even countries. Bank stocks will all tend to go up and down together (i.e. they are highly correlated). To truly diversify you need to invest in different industries and perhaps countries that won’t be subject to the same economic factors or risks. Make sure you understand the risks of each of your investments. Investing is risky and uncertain: minimize risk by diversifying your portfolio.
Many people review the portfolio returns from various asset classes over the last ten, twenty, or fifty years to get an idea of an asset class’s performance history. However, these same people often invest in only one or two single assets instead of investing in a portfolio of five hundred or more stocks; they are often disappointed when they do not get the asset class returns they thought they would. Remember, the returns from asset classes are from portfolios of hundreds of assets—not individual assets. To see the effects of diversification, see Learning Tool 23: Return Simulation Worksheet in the Learning Tools directory of this website.