I am going to be the voice of disagreement with respect to your bond allocation. You are 30 years old; unless there is some specific reason to have bonds in your portfolio (which I have not seen articulated here yet), then I would say 0% bond allocation based upon your age.
a. You have a 20 to 35 odd career ahead of you. Your earnings/income will grow significantly. You have the time to take additional risk with your retirement portfolio.
b. Unless you already have significant assets at risk, a bond allocation as a risk/return dampening tool does not make sense to me at your age, retirement asset level. If you are throwing 100k towards retirement per year currently, then maybe a bond allocation makes sense. The combination of age, length of time your money is working, and continued significant retirement contributions, in my view mean you leverage those advantages towards a very aggressive asset allocation (All world index or US stock index/International stock index).
c. I would guess you are looking at paying off students loans, establishing an emergency fund, perhaps saving towards a home downpayment, therefore have other competing priorities for your income.
b. Do you have an IPS?
c. Is there a specific driver to decide upon a 10% bond allocation?
A) thanks. I actually came to that conclusion myself after writing out my asset allocation all day. I’ll split 100% stocks international and reits for now. I’ll get into bonds at 35.
B). Not quite 100k, but should be able to put 60-70 away this year if all goes to plan
C) Emergency fund at 25k, paid half of loans aggressively, now on a 5 year refi plan with soft @ 3.3% for 80k remaining. Have full equity in a (not very fancy) condo from training that will be plenty for a down payment when it’s time to buy the doctor house
D). Not sure what an IPS is
E) just read the four pillars of investing by William Bernstein. Incredible read, but he Just made it sound critical to have some bonds at all times.
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