Rising Interest Rates: How to Realign Your Portfolio

14,767
0
2023-09-08に共有
Is the 60/40 Portfolio Is Obsolete?
The traditional 60/40 portfolio of 60% stocks and 40% bonds has been a staple of investment advice for decades. But in 2022, it failed to deliver the goods, declining about 16%.
Mark Cortazzo says that the rapid rise in interest rates has caused a "massive change" in fixed-income returns. This means that traditional safe assets are back, and it's time to reset portfolios.
Cortazzo is a Senior Vice President and Financial Advisor with the Wealth Enhancement Group. He has over 30 years of experience in the financial industry and has been named a Barron's Top Advisor for thirteen years.
Cortazzo discusses the massive reset in returns and what it means for investors. He also provides tips on how to realign your portfolio for the new environment.

00:00 Hello
00:45 Introduction
01:58 Interview with Mark Cortazzo
20:50 One Investment
24:08 Action Point

WEALTHTRACK episode 2011 broadcast on September 8, 2023

More Info: wealthtrack.com/rising-interest-rates-mean-massive…

Bookshelf:
- Your Future Self: How to Make Tomorrow Better Today : amzn.to/3P2MI4o
- The Four Pillars of Investing, Second Edition: Lessons for Building a Winning Portfolio: amzn.to/3r2osYf

コメント (19)
  • @michaelswami
    Every interview on Wealthtrack is a treat, even when it is on boring dull fixed income.
  • @PH-dm8ew
    Love this guy. Great ideas. Bonds aren’t supposed to be an income generator, they are a decline dampening agent.
  • He mentions William Bernstein..and I must say that after reading and listening to GOBS of retirement financial-survival advice..Dr. Bernstien's advice, makes the most overall sense, to me!
  • Mark Cortazzo is a beast,.......always gives rock-solid opinions and advice.
  • @janesmith506
    Thanks for the good ideas and advice on how to plan for risk in your portfolio. I especially like Mr. Cortazzo’s insight that with fixed income available at 5%, we can use a 60/40 portfolio to get 8% average return with all the volatility of an all-stock portfolio. Great way of looking at it; helped me clarify my ideas.
  • Economic investigator Frank G Melbourne Australia is still watching this very informative content cheers Frank
  • Watching wealth track with Mark Cortazzo gives reasons why diversification is a key word in any investment.
  • If your fixed income allocation is to serve as a diversifier to stocks, don't take on duration and credit quality risk.
  • He was funny when he said, "you have drift'. Things are drifting all right, lol.
  • A big assumption is that bond rates are going to remain high
  • @paulmgadola
    Inflation was about 5% on average during the last 12 months. 10-year treasury is at 4.3 %. How can you promote fixed income investments, if the real interest rate is still zero or even negative? Fixed income investments are interesting only, if the real interest is 2% or above. Otherwise, you just loose real money….. Good companies can increase prices and earnings in line or above the inflation. This means that a good stock with a P/E of 20 (e.g. 5% FCF rate). will be the much better investment for the next 10 years.
  • Peter Thiel has five billion USD$ in his Roth IRA, but we see no need for reform here in the US.
  • If bond rates stay this high stock returns won't be anywhere near what they were
  • @mr2981
    This is silly. 2022 was a bad year for equities, and a bad year for bonds and anything rate sensitive because of rapid and unexpected inflation and fed rate increases. So what, it happens. But that has already occurred. interest rates have likely either peaked or nearly peaked, so it's too late to "realign", and it would be foolish to design a portfolio to, as they say, fight the last war.
  • @rof8200
    The idea that USD hegemony will continue is rather naive.