Philippine Daily Inquirer

What is diversific­ation?

- Randell Tiongson

Q: You often hear the word “diversific­ation” when investment­s are discussed. What does it mean and how does it work? —Name withheld upon request, sent via Facebook

A: Diversific­ation is important. In fact, it is considered one of the most effective risk-management tools, minimizing investment losses.

What does Investoped­ia (a favorite online site for investment concerns) say about diversific­ation?

It says diversific­ation is “a risk-management technique that mixes a wide variety of investment­s within a portfolio. The rationale behind this technique contends that a portfo- lio of different kinds of investment­s will, on average, yield higher returns and pose a lower risk than any individual investment found within the portfolio.

“Diversific­ation strives to smooth out unsystemat­ic risk events in a portfolio so that the positive performanc­e of some investment­s will neutralize the negative performanc­e of others. Therefore, the benefits of diversific­ation will hold only if the securities in the portfolio are not perfectly correlated.”

Diversific­ation is often misunderst­ood and its execution has always been a mystery to many.

To many of us, diversific­ation is about putting money in different banks or buying different pieces of property in different areas.

However, diversific­ation is much more than that. Here are some ways to diversify:

1) By asset class—Cash or near cash (savings or checking accounts, time deposits, treasury bills or money market accounts); fixed income (government securities, corporate bonds); equities (stocks); real estate; collectibl­es (paintings, jewelry, etc.); enterprise (business)

2) By time frame—Short term (about a year); medium term (up to about five to seven years); long term (over seven years)

3) By risk—Conservati­ve, moderate, high or speculativ­e instrument­s

4) By liquidity—Highly liquid vs non-liquid investment­s

My advice? Vary your asset classes; combine short-, medium- and long-term investment­s; combine highly liquid and nonliquid assets.

By practicing diversific­ation, you are also practicing sound risk management. A prop- erly constructe­d diversific­ation strategy will minimize the risks of your investment­s and at the same time, give you better yields as compared with taking an ultra-conservati­ve position. With a good diversifie­d portfolio, the risk of totally wiping out your wealth is highly unlikely. And at the same time, it allows you to experience better growth, which will exceed inflation.

But diversific­ation also has its downside. Sometimes, a portfolio that is too diversifie­d can also prevent you from earning properly, as the volatility of many of the players in your portfolio can cancel each other. However, having a very risk-averse position can be just as dangerous as taking a risky option, as in-

flation can erode the value of your wealth. The more prudent option then would be to learn diversific­ation.

Do not be too afraid to try out diversific­ation, it is not rocket science. Come up with a diversifie­d program that is consistent with your investment objective, risk tolerance and time frame and you are on the road to achieving financial peace.

I really like the way the Bible talks about diversific­ation. Yes, the Bible is a good source of investment wisdom and here’s proof: “But divide your investment­s among many places, for you do not know what risks might lie ahead.”-Ecclesiast­es 11:2 (NLT) Since the Bible advocates diversific­ation, I am assured that it’s a great idea.

Attend RETIRE 2014: The No Nonsense Retirement Workshop with me and Marvin Germo and be able to learn and create your own comprehens­ive retirement program, July 23, 2014 at Berjaya Hotel, Makati. For inquiries, send an email to info,jcpinc@gmail.com or sms/call 0905-3104447.

Randell Tiongson is an author, columnist, speaker and advocate of personal finance. Follow Randell at www.randelltio­ngson.com To learn more about financial planning, attend our FREE personal finance talk on July 3, 7 p.m. at PSE Ortigas. To reserve, email info@rfp.ph or text <name><email><RFPinfo> at 0917-3464126.

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