What
are the Asset Classes?
Answer...
The securities that exist in today’s financial markets can be divided into
four main classes: stocks, bonds, cash, and foreign holdings, with the first two
representing the major part of most portfolios. These categories can be further
subdivided by "style." Let's take a look at these classes in the
context of mutual fund investments:
Equity Funds: The style of an equity fund is a
combination of both (1) the fund's particular investment methodology
(growth-oriented, value-oriented or a blend of the two) and (2) the
size of the companies in which it invests (large, medium and small).
Combining these two variables – investment methodology and company size
— offers a broad view of a fund's holdings and risk level. Thus, for
equity funds, there are nine possible style combinations, ranging from large
capitalization/value for the safest funds to small capitalization/growth for
the riskiest.
Fixed Income Funds: The style of a domestic
or international fixed-income fund is to focus on the two pillars of
fixed-income performance — interest-rate sensitivity (based on maturity)
and credit quality. Thus, fixed-income funds are split into three maturity
groups (short-term, intermediate-term, and long-term) and three
credit-quality groups (high, medium and low). These groupings display a
portfolio's effective maturity and credit quality to provide an overall
representation of the fund's risk, given the length and quality of bonds in
its portfolio.
back
|