Hot Issues
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Securely transfer your personal information over the Internet
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Retirees make a comeback
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Some Terminology
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Retirement evolution
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Identifying Market Trends
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Market and Economic Update - December 2011
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Merry Christmas 2011
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Few know exactly what their true financial position is, do you?
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The art of balancing bad news
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How economic reality influences the market.
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Market and Economic Updates  -  November / December 2011
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Want to do some of your own research – no problems?
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Lump sum love affair
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How much money do you need to comfortably retire?
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You can afford to contribute more to super but .....
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10 most indebted nations
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Market and Economic Updates - October / November 2011
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Timeless lessons meet new challenges
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Securely transferring Your information to your Planner.
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Gender Gap
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The 5 types of earnings per share
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No more Star Trek conventions for Spock
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An introduction to behavioural finance.
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Market Updates - September / October 2011
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The Budgeting Tools /Calculators on our website have been upgraded.
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Stosur plan an antidote for volatility
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The best performing market over the past 10 years.
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Why it takes courage to stand still
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China buys US for a bargain
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Market Updates - August / September 2011
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Buckle up for a bumpy US recovery ride
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SMSF Management
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How the US debt downgrade impacts Australia
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Mixing business and super
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The tangled web of the Australian housing bubble
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Market Updates - July / August 2011
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Under your control
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Improving your financial literacy is vital to your future ......
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5 reasons you should care about Greece
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The more things change ......  (the Carbon Tax)
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Is the US already in a double dip recession?
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Market Updates  -  June / July 2011
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Wanted: a proper understanding of personal finance
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Will your retirement income be enough?
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Facing up to the wall of sound
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A look at Corporate profit margins
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Market Updates - May / June 2011
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A budget deficit worth watching
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Securely transferring your personal data over the Internet
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Hints on how to interpret a company's Prospectus
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The birth of a new class of Investor
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Demographic trends and the implications for investment
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Market and Economic Updates  -  April / May 2011
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Federal Budget 2011-12.   At a Glance
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Federal Budget 2011-12.   Overview
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Reality versus perception
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Improving the financial literacy of your children.
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The Economic Reasons behind Nuclear Power
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Room for improvement (Pensions)
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Some more terminology explained
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Market Updates - March / April 2011
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Uninformed and impatient
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Perspective on the tragedy in Japan.
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The essentials of Corporate cash flow.
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Out in the cold (the self employed)
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Some terminology explained.
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Market Updates - February / March 2011
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Improving financial literacy is an objective we should all have.
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Why baby boomers face a super sprint
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Don't buy yet - first calculate the stock's P/E and PEG ratio
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SMSFs:  Age matters
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Some more terminology explained
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Market Updates  -  January / February 2011
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Secure File Transfer
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CPI won't stop rate rises, says Economist
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Super contender
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Super birthday ahead
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Some terminology explained
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Market Updates -   December / January 2011
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Merry Christmas and Happy New Year
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A very good Budgeting Tool is available on our site.
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Flexibility the key to spending
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8 Financial Tips For Young Adults
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Retirement boomers
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Market Updates –   November / December 2010
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Finding your Super comfort zone
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What’s your debt really costing you?
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Out in the cold – and forgotten
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Tips For Buying The Perfect Investment Property
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Market Updates –   October / November 2010
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Professional help
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On-line Sales Under Scrutiny
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An often overlooked side of SMSFs
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6 basic financial ratios
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9 signs you can’t afford your mortgage.
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Market Updates –   September  / October 2010
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Jobs for Life
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Scams
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Breakdown shocker
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Market Updates –   August / September 2010
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Three Stages of Retirement
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Deemed Dividends
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When PEG beats the P/E Ratio
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Super Debt
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5 Billionaire habits…
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Market Updates –   July / August 2010
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Five things to do before interest rates go up.
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Save for retirement – 'I am not kidding'
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Commodities Boom Hinges on China
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Debt, Debt and more Debt
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Market Updates –  June / July 2010
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Help your young adult children better understand their financial position.
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Reality challenges many super perceptions
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Comparing the Japanese and U.S. Bubbles
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Watch out for overseas investment cons
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What is a cash Flow Statement
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Market Updates – May / June 2010
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Who are Australia’s best and worst savers?
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Greece:  The worst-case scenario
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Is your investing style Hot or Not?
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A need for simple guidance
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Market Updates – April / May 2010
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2010-11 Commonwealth Budget
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What does GDP measure?
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Super falls short for women
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World's worst countries for jobs.
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High controversy
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Market Updates – March / April 2010
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Personal Credit Ratings
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Evaluating a Company’s Management
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Super trouble for women
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Tips for the prospective Landlord.
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Forget those great expectations
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Market Updates – 28th February 2010
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A matter of age.
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Berkshire’s stock splits:  Good buy or Goodbye?
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Why no extra contributions? It's no mystery
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Stronger growth tipped for Australia
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Market Updates – 31st January 2010
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6 Reasons Why You NEED A Budget
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6 Months to a better budget.
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Amnesty – Overseas Undeclared Income
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The outsiders
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Inside self-managed super
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Market Update - 31st December 2009
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Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year to all our clients.
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Powerful Superannuation tool on our site.
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When taking an average approach pays off
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Why retirement could be bad for you.
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Gifts Provided to Employees at a Christmas Party – any FBT?
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Saving for a longer life
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Market and Economic Updates – 30th November 2009
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Powerful Budget tool available on our site.
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Highly complex, highly emotional
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Retiring on investment interest: can it be done?
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Is it all over?
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Are you living house poor?
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Attitude of Banks to Insolvency
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Market and Economic Updates – 31st October 2009
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Powerful Superannuation modeling tools available on our site.
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The Alphabet Soup of Stocks
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Out in the Cold
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Insolvent Trading Defences
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Australian Super Admin Costs 'May Fall'
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Shape matters when it comes to recoveries
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Market & Economic Update - September 2009
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Dumb, dumber, dumbest
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Business confidence hits six year high
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Matching investment risk tolerance to personality
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Retirement incomes loom as super’s big challenge
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Market and Economic update - August 31 2009
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Something remarkable with SMSFs
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A determined tram driver
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Price of crude jumps to 2009 high
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Super Fund Members may be Entitled to more Age Pension
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Investments Market Data - 30th June 2009
Is your investing style Hot or Not?
By Investopedia.com
CompareShares.com.au  /
www.thebull.com.au

One of the first practical lessons in investing is that a well-constructed portfolio means one that is appropriately diversified. The standard form of diversification is through combining asset classes - such as bonds and property funds - with equities. However, this is not necessarily enough to reduce or optimize portfolio volatility. Diversification by management style is often the missing link in getting the right mix.

What exactly is investment style?
In this investment context, a style can be defined as the method that managers use to buy stocks or other assets. Newcomers to the investment business are often surprised at the very considerable variation and latitude in style and its powerful impact on performance at a given time and over a period of time.

According to Shawn Menard, writing in the Canadian Investment Review ("Risk Management: A Dynamic Process", 2000), this remains an underrated but extremely useful means of spreading risk. The deliberate use of variations in investment style as a means of reducing volatility is gaining considerable acceptance in the investment world; many believe that a symbiotic blending of management styles is an important part of the diversification process.

So-called "style rotation" has arguably become even more important in the new millennium, as the conventional equity-bond split has lost effectiveness through global capital market integration. Stylistic differences between money managers lead to a low correlation between or within asset classes that are managed with varied approaches. This is extremely valuable at a time when globalization tends to iron out differences between asset classes and many international markets are increasingly moving in tandem.

Offers and Guarantees of Style Diversification
Several investment advisory firms from around the world have developed plans to diversify their clients' portfolios across asset classes, within asset classes and across investment management styles. In the same way that different asset classes perform better and worse at different times, so too do varying approaches to management within these asset classes.

Some funds specify diversification in terms of style and guarantee to hire a certain number of managers with varying styles. Some, for instance, might promise a minimum of five separate managers, providing different and complementary strategies of equity investing.

The Main Styles
Value and Growth
The two classic stock-picking styles are those of value and growth. The value style entails buying stocks that are regarded as cheap, whereas growth stocks are expected to grow faster than the rest of the market. These two basic methods are quite different and, by having funds with both styles, investors are able to enjoy the best of both worlds. Particularly over the longer term, investors are likely to find that volatility can be reduced by mixing investment styles.

Momentum
Apart from these two classics of value and growth, there are several other fundamentally different approaches to the market. The momentum strategy is one. The idea behind this approach is that investments that have been doing well in the past and have gathered "momentum" are likely to continue doing well. Of course, it is necessary to figure out when the momentum will slow down or come to a halt.

Market Capitalization
Another form of style is the relative emphasis on market capitalization - small-, medium- or large-cap stocks. By shifting the allocation toward one size of company and away from another, very different results and performance can be obtained. In the extreme, small caps may be doing really well as a whole, while their big brothers take a loss. This is what diversification is all about.

Top-Down and Bottom-Up
Another important stylistic differentiation is between top-down and bottom-up approaches. The former entails looking at the "big picture", or the broader economic and financial scenarios, both locally and internationally, and only then moving "down" to consider specific sectors and, finally, the stocks of specific companies. Bottom-up is the opposite approach, where the focus is first and foremost on individual stocks. The basic assumption here is that good companies and their equities will thrive, even if market conditions are not particularly favorable.

Quantitative Approach
The quantitative approach is another possibility, and it relies heavily on computers for mathematical and statistical modeling. The idea is to remove all emotions from the process and have a computer check through enormous amounts of data to discover unrealized asset potential. This is, therefore, a purely technology-based means of stock picking or of asset selection. There is no shortage of such methods, but in the emotion-laden markets, which still depend heavily on people and their perceptions, computers have their limitations.

Keeping an Eye on Styles
As is the case with other assets classes and sectors, rebalancing between investment styles also makes a lot of sense. It is important to monitor and evaluate whether your style mix is performing optimally and to change it where appropriate. In other words, style should be treated like any other asset that evolves over time.

It is not uncommon for managers to not always remain true to their styles. For this reason, it is also necessary to monitor how closely managers adhere to their stated styles.

Conclusion
There are many way of diversifying a portfolio. One of these is through combining funds that operate according to fundamentally different investment styles. Although most people think of diversification as combining asset classes, similar or better results can be achieved though a sensible mix of value and growth stocks, bottom-down and top-up approaches, and so on.

The object of diversification is to achieve a good rate of return at an acceptable level of risk. Precisely this can be achieved by accepting and operating on the fundamental reality that asset management in the broadest sense, and not just the choice of assets, is critical.

Furthermore, whatever approach is favored, it is important to note that different styles may work better at different times, within different market structures and with different managers. Portfolios can be optimized through exploiting these differences through actively monitoring and mixing styles according to the prevailing situation in the various investment markets open to you.

By www.compareshares.com.au – for more articles like this click here.
CompareShares.com.au is Australia’s pre-eminent news and investing site for investors and traders, covering shares, superannuation, property, financial planning strategies and more.


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