What Assets?
You now know some of the basics of investment. So what do you invest in?
The problem
Here's what you know:
- You know what is meant by the 'return' on an asset. You are looking for high returns.
- You know that the returns on assets are subject to uncertainty (or risk). You want to reduce risk.
- You suspect that high returns are incompatible with low risk.
- You know that liquidity has value.
- You know that inflation is a special sort of risk.
- You know that diversification reduces risk. So 'lots of different assets' is better than 'a few assets'.
How do you balance all these factors to decide where to put your money?
Chose asset classes first
What you do not do is try to decide which high interest account to open or which fund to buy. This is putting the cart before the horse. First you must choose between groups of assets.
The reason for this, which you will have to take on trust for the moment, is that the fundamental investment decision is to find the right balance of risk and reward that suits your own personal preferences. The way to get this decision right is to cut down on the number of choices by grouping assets with similar risk/reward characteristics together.
Groups of similar assets are called 'asset classes'. You will end up with a number of different asset classes. So you chose between those classes.
What asset classes?
We devote one section of this site to assets and describe the most important classes there. There are nine of them. There might have been many more, but choosing the right mix just from the nine is a pretty daunting task, is it not?
Here's the key, which unlocks the whole process. For simple investing you should start by considering only two asset classes: cash and shares. The reasons for this are complicated. You should take it on trust for now. If you are sceptical, the explanation will emerge through the advanced sections of this site.
You may want to know what shares are. There are lots of different ways of investing in shares (or 'equities') but that does not matter, yet. You will need to know a bit more about the characteristics of equities to understand how much better than cash they are for long-term savings, but that can wait until the start of Advanced Investing. For now.....