The Intelligent Asset Allocator: How to Build Your Portfolio to Maximize Returns and Minimize Risk

by Bernstein, William J.
ISBN: 9780071362368
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Overview

Profit through good times and bad with a resilient, diversified portfolio

The Intelligent Asset Allocator has helped thousands of people like you build wealth through carefully diversified portfolios. Now, with global markets in constant flux, balancing risk and reward is more critical than ever.

Self-taught investor William Bernstein offers no gimmicks, inside secrets, or magic solutions--just the facts about investing and calm, smart advice on how to build and manage a portfolio designed for the long run. This is all you need, despite claims of the advisors and pundits looking to profit from your hard-earned money. This easy-to-understand guide provides everything you need, including:

* The basics of finance--historical, psychological, and institutional
* Time-tested strategies for improving the risk/reward ratio
* Ways to sharpen your focus to improve portfolio management

Bernstein walks you through the fundamentals of important topics like multiple-asset portfolios, optimal asset allocations, market efficiency, and strategy implementation.

No one knows the future of markets. Your forecast is as good as that of the last financial pundit you saw on TV. Trust your instincts, trust your research, and trust the proven-effect approach of The Intelligent Asset Allocator, and your portfolio will deliver returns through the blue skies and storms of financial markets.

  • Format: Hardcover
  • Author: Bernstein, William J.
  • ISBN: 9780071362368
  • Condition: Used
  • Dimensions: 9.38 x 0.90
  • Number Of Pages: 224
  • Publication Year: 2000

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  • A classic to keep

    Ed B. - 5 years 9 months ago

    The is a “classic” in investing. Published in 2001, most of the information concerns 1970 to 1999. But, that is not important since the purpose is to provide a theoretical model of how and why to diversify investments. The early chapters are excellent and give solid information. The later chapters are more technical and maybe less useful. Along with Siegel’s “Stocks for the Long Run”, this book Is essential in knowing how to manage investments. E.g., why you should own bonds and how much. It is about how to divide your portfolio in stock & bond index funds between large & small corps, foreign & domestic, corporate & government. Buy it in hardback and keep it in your library.