Asset Class Comparison Tool

Compare historical returns: stocks vs bonds vs gold vs real estate

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Comparing Investment Asset Classes

An asset class comparison calculator allows you to see how different investment types (stocks, bonds, real estate, commodities, cash) have performed historically and how they might fit into your portfolio. By understanding each asset class's historical returns, volatility, and correlation with others, you can build a more resilient portfolio.

How It Works: The calculator typically shows historical performance data for major asset classes over various time periods (1, 5, 10, 20+ years), including average returns, standard deviation (volatility), best/worst years, and correlations with each other. It may also project future scenarios based on historical patterns or allow you to model different allocation combinations.

When to Use It: Use this calculator when deciding how to diversify beyond simple stock/bond splits, evaluating whether to add real estate or commodities to your portfolio, understanding why diversification matters, or when someone claims a certain asset class is "always best" (spoiler: there isn't one).

Key Concepts: Stocks have provided the highest long-term returns (averaging 10% annually) but with significant volatility. Bonds offer lower returns (3-5%) but more stability. Real estate (via REITs) provides income and inflation protection. Commodities are volatile but can hedge inflation. Cash preserves capital but loses purchasing power to inflation. No asset class dominates all others in all time periods—they cycle through periods of outperformance and underperformance.

Common Mistakes: Recency bias—believing whatever performed best recently will continue—leads to buying high and selling low. Over-allocating to cash because it "feels safe" guarantees real losses to inflation. Chasing exotic asset classes (cryptocurrencies, wine, collectibles) without understanding risks or liquidity constraints. Many investors also ignore correlation—adding gold and commodities for diversification when they already own commodity-heavy stocks defeats the purpose.

Pro Tips: Most investors need only three core asset classes: stocks (growth), bonds (stability), and real estate (income + inflation hedge via REITs). Historically, stocks have outperformed all other asset classes over 30+ year periods despite volatility. Bonds provide necessary ballast during stock market crashes—in 2008, U.S. stocks fell 37% while Treasury bonds gained 5-20%. REITs offer diversification because real estate doesn't always move with stocks; during the 1970s stagflation, REITs held value while stocks struggled. Don't over-complicate: for most investors, a simple allocation of 60-80% stocks, 10-30% bonds, and 10-20% REITs beats complex strategies with 15 asset classes. Consider that timing between asset classes is nearly impossible—even professionals rarely get it right. The winning strategy is owning all major asset classes in proportion to your risk tolerance and rebalancing regularly.

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about the Asset Class Comparison Tool

The tool helps you compare the historical returns of different investment types like stocks, bonds, and real estate. This way, you can make informed decisions about where to invest your money.

Long-Term Asset Class Returns (1926-2024)

U.S. Large-Cap Stocks: ~10% annually. Long-Term Government Bonds: ~5-6%. Treasury Bills: ~3%. Real Estate (REITs): ~9-10%. Returns vary significantly by period.

Asset Class Correlation and Diversification

Assets with low or negative correlation provide diversification benefits. When stocks fall, bonds often rise (negative correlation). REITs and commodities provide partial stock market hedges.

No Asset Class is Always Best

Asset classes cycle through periods of outperformance and underperformance. Chasing last year's winners typically results in buying high. Diversification across multiple classes is the prudent approach.

⚠️ No Asset Class is Always Best