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  • Defining Alternative Asset Classes [View article]
    I go:
    15% US stock market - mostly index, plus some value-oriented no-load managers (FAIRX, UMBIX)
    19% Alpha-seeking (brilliant mutual fund managers who pursue non-correlated strategies)
    14% International developed market (mostly EFA, plus some WGRNX)
    5% Emerging markets (VWO)
    5% US REITs (VNQ)
    5% International REITs
    7% Natural resources/commodities
    15% US Government bonds/insured munis/money market funds (mix depends on yield curve and spread of taxable vs tax free yields)
    15% TIPS
    May 02 13:20 pm |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment
  • Defining Alternative Asset Classes [View article]
    My investable "alternative" asset classes are:

    International REITs - WPS (I have an equal allocation of domestic REITs via VNQ)

    Natural Resources - PCL, RYN, PCH (timberland), PRFE (energy), GLD and GDX (gold)

    Great Fund Managers who are not closet indexers: PRPFX - (excellent inflation hedge with high Sharpe Ratio - heavy in commodities, currencies, and small-caps) and Ken Heebner's CGMFX and CGMRX.

    TIPS. David Swensen strongly makes the case for TIPS as an asset class, which I buy into. Academic research indicates their powerful diversification effect.

    I like Granger's ideas above, though one I've already passed on. ARBFX has nearly 2% fees, low net returns and a negative Sharpe Ratio. With five year CAGR of just 5%, it's too volatile for me to hold. I want to get paid for risk. Low correlation isn't enough.

    I think a very important question we need to answer is, how much exposure is meaningful? How thin do we slice the pie? How big should our "alternative" category (or any category) be? How big should any sub-slice within it be to be helpful in moving us toward diversified returns?
    May 01 17:00 pm |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment
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