Were You In The Right Portfolio?

Nicholas Boguth Contributed by: Nicholas Boguth

Print Friendly and PDF
Center for Financial Planning, Inc. Retirement Planning

Talk about volatility…within 6 months, the S&P 500 hit an all-time high, fell over 33%, then climbed over 38%! As I write this*, we are almost back to an all-time high in the stock market.

I recently wrote about asset allocation as the single biggest decision you will make in your investing lifetime. There are many QUANTITATIVE factors that should go into your asset allocation such as your financial goals, time horizon, savings rate, liquidity needs, and return expectations (just to name a few), but there is a QUALITATIVE factor that stands out among the rest: how you feel about your portfolio.

Market crashes such as the one we experienced in March offer unique opportunities to reevaluate our portfolios; specifically the aforementioned “feeling”.  When the stock market fell 10%, then 20%, then 30%...how did you feel? Were you frantically watching the news worried about your financial future or comfortable in your recliner watching your favorite Netflix series? Were you checking your statements daily with rising blood pressure or confident in your advisor and financial plan?

Center for Financial Planning, Inc. Retirement Planning

Which asset allocation are you in? Mostly stocks, mostly bonds, or somewhere in between? Back in March, that single decision would have altered your stock market experience more than anything else, and it will continue to drive your experience going forward. If you are not confident in (or unsure of) your asset allocation, we’d love to help.

*Indexes above represented by: Bond – BbgBarc US Agg Bond TR, and Stock – S&P 500 TR. Return data as of 7/20/2020.

Nicholas Boguth is a Portfolio Administrator at Center for Financial Planning, Inc.® He performs investment research and assists with the management of client portfolios.


You cannot invest directly in any index. Pass performance doesn’t guarantee future results. Investing involves risk regardless of the strategy selected, including asset allocation and diversification. The S&P 500 is an unmanaged index of 500 widely held stocks that’s generally considered representative of the U.S. stock market. The Bloomberg Barclays US Aggregate Bond Index is a broad-based flagship benchmark that measures the investment grade, US-dollar denominated, fixed-rate taxable bond market.