View Single Post
  #1  
Old 06-12-2007, 05:29 PM
fluorescenthippo fluorescenthippo is offline
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: on the bubble of life
Posts: 4,498
Default an asset allocation plan

I made a post a few weeks back about where to put my money (like 85k) and the book All About Asset Allocation was recommended to me. Im 22 and graduating in December. Im looking for long term investments (20 years+) for most of my money. I don't know much but I was thinking of diversifying based upon that book. on page 228 there is an early savers portfolio breakdown.

here is the breakdown:

US equity

vanguard total stokc market index (VTSMX) 25%
ishares S&P 600 barra value (IJS) 10%
brideway ultra small company market (BRSIX) 5%
vanguard REIT index fund (VGSIX) 10%

international:

vanguard pacific stock index (VPACX) 5%
vanguard european stock index (VEURX) 5%
vanguard international explorer fund (VINEX) 5% (this one is closed)
DFA emerging markets (DFEMX) 5%

FIXED:

vanguard high yield corporate bonds (VWEHX) 10%
vanguard inflation protected securities (VIPSX) 5%
ishares agg bond fund (AGG) 10%
payden emerging markets bond fund (PYEMX) 5%


how does it look?

and a few questions:

the early savers plans suggest no money in liquid. how is this possible or practical? I was planning on keeping like 10K in an online money market. should that money just be considered part of my fixed investments instead of bonds then?


i dont know much about rebalancing but you get taxed on gains if you do this right? so i was just going to rebalance when i make more investments and hopefully be close enough to the target percentages

the book also talks about dollar cost averaging and tax swapping. is tax swapping even worth it? i dont think ive seen much about it in this forum.
Reply With Quote