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What Is a Portfolio?

Do you own stocks, bonds, ETFs, cryptocurrencies, real estate, or something else? No matter what financial assets you own, they all make up your portfolio.

Takeaways

  • A portfolio consists of all the investments you own. It includes stocks, bonds, ETFs, cryptocurrencies, and even real estate.
  • There are five different types of portfolios: aggressive portfolio, defensive portfolio, income portfolio, speculative portfolio, and hybrid portfolio.

Definition of a portfolio

A portfolio is a collection of your financial assets. Your portfolio shows your investment scope and risk tolerance.

For example, you plan to invest $10,000 in total. You have limited risk tolerance but want to take a chance at high-volatility investments. You decide that the maximum loss you can bear is $3,000. So, here is how you decide to allocate your money.

To be safe, you put $3,000 in municipal bonds and another $3,000 in utility stocks. You put $1,000 in an ETF tracking the S&P 500 index. For the remaining $3,000, you put $1,000 in an emerging medical stock and $2,000 in cryptocurrency.

This is what your portfolio looks like:

Five types of portfolios

Based on different investment horizons, portfolios roughly fall into the five groups below.

Aggressive portfolio

Aggressive portfolios are for those who look for capital appreciation and have high risk tolerance. This portfolio holds high volatility investments, mainly growth stocks.

Investors holding this type of portfolio can see their assets appreciate quickly. However, they can potentially bear heavy losses too.

Defensive portfolio

Defensive portfolios are for investors with a low risk tolerance, aiming to preserve the value of their investments. This portfolio holds stocks in the utility/consumer staples sector, bonds, mutual funds, etc.

The portfolio tends to hold value even when the market is volatile. Investors can expect to receive dividends as income rather than profit from capital appreciation.

Income portfolio

Income portfolios, as the name implies, deliver income. This portfolio holds stocks paying stable and high dividends, dividend ETFs, municipal bonds, etc.

The portfolio tends to offer a relatively stable stream of income. However, it could be affected by economic cycles.

Speculative portfolio

Speculative portfolios are only suitable for high-risk-tolerance investors. This portfolio holds initial public offerings (IPOs), penny stocks, stocks of tech and healthcare companies working on a breakthrough product, and cryptocurrencies.

Speculative portfolios carry high risks. Despite the possible high returns, investors should be prepared to lose every penny invested.

Hybrid portfolio

A hybrid portfolio puts investments across different asset classes. It mainly invests in multiple blue-chip stocks, bonds, and also cash equivalents, ETFs, etc.

The benefit of diversification is that the entire portfolio will not be likely to plunge if one type of asset takes a blow.

Now that we’ve learned what a portfolio is, let’s see how to build a portfolio in the next lesson.

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Trading of stocks and all other investment products involves substantial risk of loss and is not suitable for every investor. The value of stocks may fluctuate and as a result, investors may lose more than their original investment. This is not an offer or solicitation of any offer to buy or sell any security, investment, or other product.
Lesson List
1
Finding a Trading Idea
2
Making a First-Time Investment
3
Money Management in Stock Trading
4
Emotion Management in Stock Trading
5
Preparing for a Trade
6
How to monitor your trade
7
What Are the Different Types of Investments?
8
Portfolio Investment
9
Saving vs Investing
10
Is Investing Risky?
11
An Introduction to Two Risk Categories
12
How to Evaluate the Performance of Return in Your Portfolio
13
How to Build a Portfolio
What Is a Portfolio?
15
Why Invest?
16
How to Invest
17
Your Investment Strategy
18
The Main Investment Areas
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