A few days ago, we had received our proceeds from the delisting of Paragon REIT. As per our portfolio management practice, these would be parked at the cash portion of our Bedokian Portfolio. The recent inflow had increased the cash allocation to about 8%, which went above the allowable threshold of 7.5% (for us, we set the level of cash at 5%, with an allowance for 2.5% deviation). This meant that as per our guideline, it is preferred to deploy at least 0.5% to other asset classes.
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While the past couple of years had seen cash being a good asset class, the declining treasury bill and fixed deposit rates reverted it to become what is known as “cash drag”, the opportunity cost of holding too much cash is the missed potential higher returns from it being invested into other financial instruments, though in our personal opinion we should hold some in case of opportunistic play (e.g. our 10-30 Rule1). Also, the cash portion is where cash injections and dividends/coupons/interest would flow to, so it is like a reservoir of sorts with the necessity of having some water in it.
Still, there are times (like now) when it is difficult to determine where to deploy the cash to. The general idea of allocation is to put it at the asset class portion that is about to hit or hitting the negative deviation allowance, but the execution part is usually marred by this question: what to get?
There are three ways to go about it, but I shall highlight on the first two: prospecting and adding onto current holdings. For prospecting, it is understood that time and effort is needed to look for new counters to invest in (e.g., for me I did not prospect for a few years as mentioned here), and for those who cannot afford these resources, looking at current holdings is another way, but it is less incentivising to load them if their valuations are not favourable.
This brings us to the third way: going by exchange traded funds (ETFs), specifically those which are passive and follow indices. This method is in the domain of passive investing; investors would just rebalance their portfolios either via cash injections or selling deemed overvalued asset classes and buying into deemed undervalued ones. For ETFs, one need not to worry about valuations of individual counters since they represent (sort of) the entire asset class in general; in other words, it is buying into the asset class.
Of course, the caveat is to look for diversified ETFs that covers different geographical regions and sectors/industries for the “go the ETF way” to be effective. It could be a good jumpstart the portfolio into a core-satellite model2.
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1 – The Bedokian Portfolio (2nd ed), p131-133
2 – ibid, p135-137
Totally agree that ETFs are a good option to diversify. Recently, I've also been buying the LionGlobal All Seasons fund which is a balanced fund. If you believe that interest rates are going to cut, then fixed income will give not only some safety but potential capital gains.
ReplyDeleteHello World ,
DeleteThanks for the comment and also information on the LionGlobal balanced fund.
Cheers!