Alternative investments are
investments or investment strategies other than buying and selling
stocks and bonds. Typical strategies include private equity, leveraged
buy-out (LBO) funds, arbitrage strategies, hedge strategies, trend
or event driven strategies, real estate and venture capital. Any
investment that matches the benefit profile typical to alternative
investments could be included! Most alternative investments include
elements of both qualitative and quantitative decision making
strategies.
Alternative investments do
have drawbacks, though, including potential one time losses from
rare events and high management fees.
WHAT ARE THE BENEFITS
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PERFORMANCE
The performance of alternative investments has usually exceeded
that of more traditional investments in stocks and bonds over
the last 10-15 years. In that period, hedge funds, a headline
indicator of alternative investment strategies, have consistently
outperformed US stocks. In fact, due to the direction-agnostic
nature of alternative investments, they can benefit in both rising
and falling stock markets.
The risk profile of alternative
investments has traditionally been very different, with a low
and manageable risk profile (volatility), except for occasional
extreme events. More recently, businesses like Enron have shown
that conventional investments can have extreme probability outlier
events as well.
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NON- CORRECTION
As alternative investments are direction-agnostic, it does not
matter whether the market goes up or down. So when your stock
portfolio is diving, the chances are that your alternative investments
are doing fine. The non-correlated nature of alternative investments
fits well with the core of modern portfolio theory: that a group
of non-correlated, positive yielding investments statistically
offers better risk-adjusted returns than the individual investment
components.
In practical terms, non-correlation
simply means that it is unlikely that all your investments will
decline at the same time. With recent stock market history amply
illustrating the ability of markets to decline dramatically, alternative
investments have become increasingly popular.
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DIVERSIFICATION
Typically, a conventional asset manager will diversify within
conventional asset classes... which are mainly subject to the
same external forces. Only by diversifying into different asset
classes, can the full benefits of diversification be achieved.
We recommend only up to one
third of your assets should be invested in alternative investments,
with no more 5-15% being devoted to any one class. Such a diversified
portfolio could have a substantially higher rate of return over
time, and a significantly lower decline during drawdowns, than
a portfolio without an alternative investment component.
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