"As someone who writes about building portfolios for a living, I do research on many types of investments,
ranging from tried-and-true core holdings to more esoteric corners of the investment world.
A key part of my job is to comb through the available evidence and help readers understand the pros and cons
of various investment types for their own portfolios."
"But what do I actually do with my own money?
Here, I’ll discuss seven popular investment types that I’ve decided to take a pass on.
I’ll also discuss the rationale behind my decisions."
https://www.morningstar.com/portfolios/7-things-i-dont-own-my-portfolio-2
Comments
My portfolio does not include the following investments:
1) Dedicated REITs
2) Sector funds
3) Alternative investments
4) Dedicated high-yield bond funds (my multi-sector & nontraditional bond funds can hold HY)
5) Gold bullion or dedicated gold funds
Unlike the author, most of my funds are actively managed and I own a chunk of I Bonds.
¹ I reserve the right to change my mind about investment exclusions at any time!
1. Dedicated REIT. I own 'O' Realty Income. First bought in 2009 @ $22/share, added to in 2013 @ $38. It's been paying me a steady 5-6% yearly in dividends since the beginning.
2. Sector funds - FSPTX and/or FSELX over a similar time period.
3. Alts - QLENX currently. I would concur that there are a lot of mushy apples in that barrel but not all. I use it as a hopeful hedge against a full blown correction.
4. Gold - Again off and on I hold a small pot between 3-5% of my total portfolio in either mutual funds, mining stocks or physical specimens following Rono in that regard. My current position is in IAUI.
Two points
- Bug looking for a windshield
- Data torture will produce whatever one desires.
I haven't owned any gold / miners funds the last couple years, and prior to that in only small quantities. (She doesn't own any). Not something I'd care to brag about as it has trounced everything else I know of for the past 3 years.
Alternatives get beaten up a lot. Such a wide and hard to define area. I'd say 80-90% not worth owning. But if very old and very risk averse there are some decent L/S funds that could possibly keep you from getting completely taken to the cleaners in a market wipe out. I don't think M* includes those under alternative in their schematics.
Thanks for posting @Observant1
I own a slug of OHI as a REIT, and am considering GTY and some specialized ones at some point once my tax situation changes.
I'm ok with sector funds if you know what they own, watch them, and don't just blindly jump into them. (to wit: I have EUAD as a 'sector fund' for European defense and aerospace.)
Alts I won't touch with a bargepole.
I don't own gold, but in recent months I've been auto-throwing $200 into BTC every payday as an experiment.
Otherwise, across portfolios, I'm still like 85% in stocks. The only FI I have is in PRWCX and a Franklin tax-free fund that my parents setup for me back in the '80s.