Asset Classes Explained: What You Need to Know
Learn the difference between stocks, bonds, real estate, and gold. We break down each asset class so you understand where your money goes and why it matters.
Read MoreBuild a balanced portfolio by spreading investments across asset classes, understanding correlation, and making informed sector allocation decisions.
Practical resources to help you understand how different investments work together in your portfolio.
Learn the difference between stocks, bonds, real estate, and gold. We break down each asset class so you understand where your money goes and why it matters.
Read More
Discover how correlation affects your portfolio. We explain negative, positive, and zero correlation—and why low-correlation assets protect your savings during market downturns.
Read More
Not all sectors move together. Learn how to allocate funds across banking, IT, healthcare, and other sectors to reduce your exposure to any single industry’s downturn.
Read More
Start small and build systematically. We walk through creating a basic diversified portfolio with realistic allocation percentages that work for most Indian savers.
Read MoreSpreading investments across multiple assets reduces the impact of any single investment performing poorly. If one asset class declines, others may hold steady or grow.
The goal isn’t just variety—it’s having assets that behave differently. When stocks decline, bonds often remain stable. That’s the real power of diversification.
Markets move. Your allocation drifts. Review your portfolio yearly and bring it back to your target allocation. It’s simple but often overlooked by savers.
A 25-year-old and a 60-year-old need different allocations. Your age, goals, and comfort with volatility should drive your diversification strategy.
These terms appear frequently in portfolio discussions. Understanding them helps you make better decisions.
How you distribute your money across different investments. A well-spread portfolio reduces concentration risk and smooths returns over time.
When two assets move in opposite directions. Stocks and gold often show negative correlation, making them useful together in a portfolio.
Market-wide risk that affects all investments. Diversification can’t eliminate this, but it reduces unsystematic risk specific to individual assets.
Your deliberate choice of how much to invest in stocks, bonds, real estate, and cash. This decision drives your portfolio’s risk and return profile.
Periodically selling winning investments and buying lagging ones to maintain your target allocation. It’s a disciplined way to “buy low, sell high.”
Measures how much an investment moves relative to the overall market. Low-beta assets are more stable; high-beta assets are more volatile.