Strategic Asset Allocation
Strategic Asset Allocation
The long-term target mix of asset classes (stocks, bonds, cash) in a portfolio based on the client's risk tolerance, time horizon, and financial objectives. This baseline allocation typically remains stable over years and is not adjusted for short-term market conditions or forecasts. Strategic allocation is typically documented in the Investment Policy Statement (IPS) and serves as the portfolio's foundation, with periodic rebalancing to maintain target percentages.
An adviser establishes a strategic allocation of 60% stocks, 30% bonds, and 10% cash for a 45-year-old client with moderate risk tolerance and a 20-year retirement time horizon. This allocation remains the target baseline for years, regardless of market conditions. If strong stock performance shifts the portfolio to 68% stocks, 25% bonds, 7% cash, the adviser rebalances back to the 60/30/10 targets to maintain the strategic allocation.
Students confuse strategic asset allocation (long-term baseline targets based on client profile) with tactical asset allocation (short-term adjustments based on market timing or economic forecasts). Strategic allocation is passive and policy-driven; tactical allocation is active and market-driven. Strategic allocation is also distinct from diversification: strategic allocation determines what percentage to invest in each asset class, while diversification spreads investments within each class.
How This Is Tested
- Distinguishing strategic allocation (long-term policy-based targets) from tactical allocation (short-term market-driven adjustments)
- Matching strategic allocations to client profiles based on age, risk tolerance, time horizon, and financial objectives
- Understanding that strategic allocation is documented in the Investment Policy Statement (IPS)
- Recognizing that strategic allocation requires periodic rebalancing to maintain target percentages
- Identifying appropriate strategic allocations for different life stages and risk profiles
- Understanding strategic allocation is based on long-term capital market expectations, not short-term market forecasts
Regulatory Limits
| Description | Limit | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Investment Policy Statement requirement | Not federally mandated for all accounts | While not required by SEC rules for all accounts, strategic allocation is typically documented in Investment Policy Statements (IPS) as a best practice, especially for institutional and high-net-worth clients. ERISA plans require written investment policies. |
Example Exam Questions
Test your understanding with these practice questions. Select an answer to see the explanation.
Jennifer, age 32, is a physician earning $240,000 annually with a 401(k) balance of $180,000. She is married with no children, has an emergency fund covering 9 months of expenses, and plans to retire at age 62. Her investment goal is long-term capital appreciation for retirement, and she indicates she can tolerate significant short-term volatility to pursue higher long-term returns. Which strategic asset allocation would be most appropriate for her retirement portfolio?
C is correct. Jennifer has a 30-year time horizon until retirement, high income stability, high risk tolerance for volatility, and adequate emergency reserves. An 80% stock allocation maximizes long-term growth potential appropriate for her aggressive risk profile and long time horizon, while maintaining 15% bonds for diversification benefits and 5% cash for liquidity and rebalancing opportunities. This strategic allocation aligns with her stated objectives and constraints.
A is too conservative for her profile. a 40% stock allocation would be more appropriate for someone within 10 years of retirement or with low risk tolerance, not a 32-year-old with 30 years until retirement and high risk tolerance. B is moderately conservative and more suitable for investors 15-20 years from retirement or with moderate (not high) risk tolerance. D (100% stocks) eliminates diversification benefits and rebalancing opportunities. even aggressive strategic allocations typically include 10-20% in bonds to provide stability during market downturns and enable strategic rebalancing.
The Series 65 exam tests your ability to match strategic asset allocation to comprehensive client profiles, considering multiple suitability factors simultaneously: time horizon, risk tolerance, income stability, liquidity needs, and investment objectives. Understanding that strategic allocation is the long-term baseline driven by client characteristics (not market timing) is critical for suitable portfolio recommendations and IPS development.
Which statement best distinguishes strategic asset allocation from tactical asset allocation?
A is correct. Strategic asset allocation establishes long-term baseline target percentages for each asset class based on the client's risk tolerance, time horizon, investment objectives, and other suitability factors. These targets remain relatively stable over years and are not adjusted for short-term market conditions. Tactical asset allocation, in contrast, makes temporary deviations from strategic targets to capitalize on perceived short-term market opportunities or economic forecasts (e.g., overweighting stocks if bull market is anticipated, or increasing cash during expected volatility).
B is backwards: asset allocation (both strategic and tactical) determines asset CLASS percentages (stocks, bonds, cash), not individual security selection. Security selection happens within each asset class after allocation decisions are made. C reverses the definitions: strategic allocation is passive and policy-driven with periodic (not frequent) rebalancing to maintain targets, while tactical allocation is active with more frequent adjustments based on market timing. D is incorrect. both strategic and tactical allocation apply to all asset classes and portfolio types, not limited to specific asset classes.
The Series 65 exam frequently tests the critical distinction between strategic (passive, long-term, client-based) and tactical (active, short-term, market-based) allocation approaches. Understanding this difference is fundamental to portfolio management philosophy, client communication about strategy, and distinguishing passive versus active management styles. Investment advisers must clearly explain which approach they use and why.
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Access Free BetaAn investment adviser is developing strategic asset allocations for three different clients. Which client-allocation pairing is MOST appropriate based on standard strategic allocation principles?
Client A: Age 28, aggressive risk tolerance, 37-year time horizon, stable income
Client B: Age 55, moderate risk tolerance, 10-year time horizon, approaching retirement
Client C: Age 70, conservative risk tolerance, needs portfolio income, retired
B is correct. This option properly matches strategic allocation to each client's risk profile, time horizon, and life stage.
Client A (85/12/3): Aggressive allocation appropriate for a young investor with long time horizon, high risk tolerance, and ability to weather market volatility over 37 years. Maximum equity exposure for long-term growth.
Client B (60/35/5): Balanced allocation suitable for pre-retiree with moderate risk tolerance and 10-year horizon. Maintains growth potential while increasing stability as retirement approaches. The 60/40 stocks/bonds split is a classic moderate strategic allocation.
Client C (30/50/20): Conservative allocation for retired client needing income and capital preservation. Higher bond allocation generates income, significant cash for living expenses and emergencies, limited stock exposure for some growth to combat inflation but minimized volatility risk.
A reverses the risk progression, giving the youngest client (longest horizon, highest risk tolerance) the most conservative allocation and the oldest retired client the most aggressive allocation. C (100% stocks for all) ignores individual differences in risk tolerance, time horizon, and life stage, violating suitability requirements. D assigns allocations completely backward to client profiles, with the conservative retiree getting 70% stocks and the aggressive young professional getting only 30% stocks.
The Series 65 exam tests your ability to construct appropriate strategic allocations for different client profiles, demonstrating understanding that allocation should generally become more conservative as clients age, approach retirement, or have shorter time horizons and lower risk tolerance. This application of life-cycle investing principles is fundamental to suitability and fiduciary responsibility.
All of the following statements about strategic asset allocation are accurate EXCEPT
C is correct (the EXCEPT answer). This statement is FALSE and describes tactical asset allocation, not strategic allocation. Strategic allocation targets are based on LONG-TERM client characteristics (risk tolerance, time horizon, objectives) and remain relatively stable over years, NOT adjusted for short-term market forecasts, economic indicators, or market timing attempts. Making frequent adjustments based on market predictions is the hallmark of tactical allocation, which represents temporary deviations from strategic targets.
A is accurate: strategic allocation is fundamentally driven by client suitability factors including risk tolerance, time horizon, investment objectives, tax status, liquidity needs, and financial situation. These determine the appropriate long-term asset class mix. B is accurate: strategic allocation represents the portfolio's baseline policy and is typically documented in the Investment Policy Statement (IPS) as the target allocation. It remains stable unless the client's circumstances or objectives fundamentally change (e.g., approaching retirement, major life change). D is accurate: while strategic targets remain stable, actual portfolio percentages drift due to different asset class returns. Periodic rebalancing (e.g., annually or when allocations drift beyond tolerance bands) restores the strategic target percentages.
The Series 65 exam tests whether you understand that strategic allocation is PASSIVE and policy-driven, not active or market-timing based. Confusing strategic allocation (stable, long-term, client-based) with tactical allocation (dynamic, short-term, market-based) is a common error. Investment advisers must clearly distinguish their approach and understand that strategic allocation provides discipline and prevents emotional reactions to market fluctuations.
An investment adviser has established a strategic asset allocation of 70% stocks, 25% bonds, and 5% cash for a client based on their risk tolerance, time horizon, and financial objectives. After one year, strong equity performance has shifted the portfolio to 77% stocks, 20% bonds, and 3% cash. Which of the following actions align with strategic asset allocation principles?
1. Rebalance the portfolio back to 70/25/5 targets by selling stocks and buying bonds and cash
2. Maintain the current 77/20/3 allocation since stocks are performing well and likely to continue
3. Document the 70/25/5 strategic targets in the client's Investment Policy Statement
4. Adjust the strategic allocation to 77/20/3 to reflect current market conditions and momentum
A is correct. Only statements 1 and 3 align with strategic asset allocation principles.
Statement 1 is TRUE: Strategic allocation requires periodic rebalancing to maintain target percentages when market movements cause portfolio drift. The portfolio has drifted from 70/25/5 to 77/20/3, representing a 7 percentage point overweight in stocks. Rebalancing back to strategic targets maintains the intended risk-return profile and risk exposure consistent with the client's objectives and constraints. This also creates a disciplined "buy low, sell high" mechanism.
Statement 2 is FALSE: This represents performance chasing and abandons strategic allocation discipline. Strategic allocation principles require maintaining targets regardless of recent performance or market momentum. Allowing drift based on performance contradicts the long-term, policy-driven nature of strategic allocation and increases risk exposure beyond the client's strategic target.
Statement 3 is TRUE: Strategic allocation targets should be documented in the Investment Policy Statement (IPS), which serves as the portfolio's governing document. The IPS establishes the strategic allocation policy, rebalancing procedures, and tolerance bands for acceptable drift before rebalancing is triggered.
Statement 4 is FALSE: This describes tactical allocation or performance chasing, not strategic allocation. Strategic targets should NOT be adjusted based on current market conditions, momentum, or short-term performance. Strategic allocation changes only when the CLIENT'S circumstances, objectives, or constraints fundamentally change (e.g., approaching retirement, change in risk tolerance, major life event), not based on market performance.
The Series 65 exam tests comprehensive understanding of strategic allocation implementation including rebalancing discipline, IPS documentation, and resistance to performance chasing or market timing. Investment advisers must distinguish between maintaining strategic allocation discipline (rebalancing to targets) versus tactical adjustments (deviating from targets based on market views). Understanding that strategic allocation remains stable unless client circumstances change is critical for fiduciary responsibility and long-term portfolio management.
💡 Memory Aid
Think of strategic allocation like building blueprints: The architect designs the foundational structure (60% stocks, 30% bonds, 10% cash) based on how the building will be USED and who will LIVE there (client profile). These blueprints stay the same for years. You don't redesign the foundation because paint prices changed (market timing). That's tactical: temporary paint color choices. Strategic = Structure (stable, long-term). Tactical = Temporary adjustments (short-term). Key: Strategy is CLIENT-driven. Tactics are MARKET-driven.
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