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Paperback Asset Allocation For Dummies Book

ISBN: 0470409630

ISBN13: 9780470409633

Asset Allocation For Dummies

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

An easy-to-understand how-to guide to the single most important thing you can do in investing -- choosing and mixing your assets successfully.

You don't need to be an expert analyst, a star stock-picker, or a rocket scientist to have better investment results than most other investors. You just need to allocate your assets in the right way, and have the conviction to stick with that allocation.

The big secret behind asset allocation -- the...

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Great source for individuals seeking financial guidance by Gobind D.

My credentials: I am the president of DiscoverRIA, not-for-profit organization for increasing end clients awareness of financial services reources. I wrote the Roth IRA Book), and developoed the most advanced Rebalancing software in the industry (iRebal). I have met with many of the leading advisors in the professional financial business and Jerry Miccolis of one of them. I have a great respect for his understanding of financial planning and his ability to reduce complex concepts to a level that is simple to understand and still remains accurate. This book is an illustration of his abilities and has been written in a very unbiased way without promotong one type of service or planning methodology. So, if you are an individual considering an advisor to help you or if you wish to manage your assets yourself (I suggest you do not), this is a great book for you. It will walk you through the steps you need to take. I particularly like the last chapter which outlines the due diligence questions you should ask of an advisor. If there is a shorfall it is that the book does not clearly show the differences between Registered Independent Advisors and Broker Dealers. That is a very confusing area for end clients and the book could have helped more to clarify the distinctions. A further point I would have liked to seen elaborated is the risks of doing planning yourself: your emotions will invariable come in the way of sound decisions especially when the market is in turmoil. By the way, it is NOT a book for stock pickers: that is completely opposed to the wisdom of Asset Allocation based Financial Investing. Other than those two minor additions, I consider the book to be the best resource on financial planning and Asset Allocation. Gobind D. CFP, Ph.D. President FCalgorithms LLC Chairman DiscoverRIA LLC

Great book to de-mystify personal investing

I was reading Asset Allocation for Dummies on the subway recently and a man leaned over and whispered in my ear "Well, the current economic drawback has proven that asset allocation doesn't work anymore". Actually, its quite the contrary. Because of the current downturn and ongoing volatility, proper asset allocation is needed more than ever. Many people confuse asset allocation with just the stock market and stock picking. The fact is, you have to put your money somewhere, and active and knowledgeable asset allocation is the only way to protect yourself. You have to sprinkle it around, diversify and come up with a plan that best suits your goals. I am a bookkeeper and business manager and have read a variety of financial advisory books. I picked Asset Allocation for Dummies because I recently fired my financial planner because he was not as engaged as I would have liked. I decided to take matters into my own hands. More than anything, this book has helped me to focus on the task at hand. The Dummies books are written in a comfortable colloquial manner, simple and to the point. But it is no way simplistic. From computing standard deviation to negative correlation, this book covers the basics and beyond. Its laid out in such a way that it can be used as a reference book and does not need to be read cover to cover depending on your knowledge base. It has helped me tackle the task at hand with confidence and ease. I would recommend it for anyone that wants to save and hold on to their money for retirement. The Madoff scandle has only reinforced the fact that blindly trusting others to manage your assets is not a good idea. Some basic knowledge of investing and strategy is imperative to anyone wanting to take responsibility for their own assets. Asset Allocation for Dummies is a great place to start.

Asset Alocation for Dummies

First, let me explain that I am an inveterate stock picker and market timer. And, as a hobbyist, I've been pretty good at it. But as a responsible husband and father of two, I'm not reckless enough to think that my family's future should hinge on my continued ability to pick the right stocks and guess when the market is going to turn the next corner. Besides, the meltdown of the fall of 2008 shook me. I want to invest the bulk of the family assets in a way that might not be as exciting, but is a lot more reliable as far as securing our future lifestyle is concerned. That's what led me to the asset allocation approach. I searched a few titles for a primer on the subject and finally found this one. It's crystal clear in explaining asset allocation and how it works. It goes beyond that, too, in explaining rebalancing, how to locate assets in different accounts to save on taxes, how to find the right investments (stocks, bonds, real estate, commodities, mutual funds, exchange traded funds, etc.) at the lowest cost, how to tie our investments into our long-term financial plan, etc., etc. And the case studies really hit home. What really struck me, though, is that this is no simpleton's guide to investing -- the stuff that's covered is actually pretty sophisticated, but I can't imagine it being explained any more understandably than it is here. I would heartily recommend this book to all the do-it-yourselfers out there. You know, I would even recommend it to those who have financial advisors, since this book will make you a much more informed buyer of advice during these days when it's hard to trust anyone with your money. The chapter on how to grill an advisor before you hire one is worth the price all by itself. [5 stars]

Depth, breadth -- and easy to read!

This book makes an important but potentially heavy topic actually fun to read about. A nice sense of humor runs throughout, starting with the cover. No surprise that the text is written for "regular folks," as part of the "Dummies" series, but what did surprise me is how much useful information is packed into it. Besides asset allocation, the authors cover specific investment options, tax considerations, and how to pick a financial advisor if you decide to seek professional guidance. And the way the book is organized makes it very practical to use as a reference guide. Key concepts are concisely summarized up front; there's more detail on specific topics in later chapters, whenever you're ready for it. By profession I'm a financial writer whose main audience is institutional investors. I was struck by how the authors take the same approach to asset allocation as the most sophisticated and successful pension and endowment funds, and make it all accessible to the layman. The book has a clear goal in mind -- giving you all the information you need to be a successful long-term investor, without devoting your life to it or becoming a numbers geek -- and meets that goal exceedingly well.

Great reference book -- and great gift idea!

A great reference book whether you're new to investing or an expert. Covers not only what you'd expect from a book on asset allocation (diversification, asset mix, rebalancing, etc.) but also how to coordinate your investing with your tax planning and your long-term financial planning. The concepts and techniques are pretty advanced -- they're apparently what the pros use -- but the book explains them in a clear, simple, step-by-step, how-to way that makes them easy for anyone to implement (and understand why and how they work). It also provides a clear roadmap to where to find advice when you need it, and how not to get fleeced in the process. A thoughtful gift for graduates, newlyweds, recent retirees, or just about anyone who distrusts get-rich-quick schemes and wants to base their investing on sound fundamentals.
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