Wednesday, September 26, 2007

Investor Categorization

In this post, I will provide a general way of categorizating the investor and recommend basically what type of funds you should invest in.

I will broadly classify investors into 3 groups and allocate the ratio between bonds and equities accordingly. The first group is the conservative group where you basically have low risk capacity, longer time period (usually 3 years or more) to invest and requests that your returns to be around 5-8% . For this group, normally I would recommend that you put 80% in bond funds which usually gives you a return of about 6% annually and the remainder in a broadly diversified fund like a global equities fund that returns you about 10% annually. The bond funds do not fluctuate that much, accounting for one of the lowest risk financial tools available. The global equities fund is usually medium risk in nature but allows exposure to a growing economy where over a long run, this fund usually offers good returns for a reasonable amount of risk. However, to partake in a growing economy, this group can adjust their portfolio to having 60% bond funds and 40% equities fund.

The second group is the "fence" group as they want ok returns which is about 9-15% returns, is willing to accept some risks of losing approximately 10-20% of their money but only wish to tie up their money for no longer than 3 years . This group should allocate 30% to bond funds, 50% to global equities fund and another 20% to higher risk single sector/country fund. The higher risk funds allows the investor maximise returns in a growing economy while for bond funds and global equities fund, the explanation are already as discussed under the conservative investor category. The investor can swing their portfolio to 10% in bonds, 60% in global equities and 30% in single sector / country funds to maximise returns in a growing economy.

The third group can be termed as the aggressive investor where they only accept high returns of above 15%, is willing to take high risk of losing approximately up to 30-50% of their money and is only willing to tie up their money for a short period like 1-2 years max. This group should delve purely in equities, 50% in global equities and 50% in high risk single sector/country funds. To maximise returns in a growing economy, they can put 30% in global equities and 70% in high risk funds.

Of course, investors can opt for a more diversified portfolio even though they are aggressive like putting 10% in bond funds but it is not advisable for the reverse like putting 10% in high risk funds if you are conservative. This is just a rough guide as each investor might although fall in these broad categories but their risk appetite might be bigger and thus allocating heavier weightage to equities. Note that there is no such thing as low risk, low period of investing and yet high returns. Investing can be summed up by this formula where Returns = Time period of investment + Risks taken.

Personally, I'm started out by buying a progressive fund where 80% are in equities and 20% in bonds, this nets me an average of 10% returns for the past 2 years annualised. Recently, I had shifted a major portion about 60% of my savings to single country funds where I'm enjoying about 30-40% returns (Top half of 2007, I cashed in a returns of approximately 10% after investing for 3 months and currently I'm enjoying approximately 15% returns which I had not cashed in) if you annualised the returns.

Note that my guide is not exactly comprehensive and serves as a rough guide to novices. I can't say I'm exactly the best as I know people that enjoys 100% returns. I don't speculate exactly when is the fund's lowest point of that year but just buy in to keep unless some bad news are brewing. My next post will look at how a novice investor can start to invest and where to invest