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Investing Strategy

Asset Allocation by Age: Stock-Bond Mix for Retirement

One of the most important decisions in retirement investing isn't which stocks to pick — it's how to divide your portfolio between stocks and bonds as you age. Too aggressive and a market crash can derail your plans. Too conservative and inflation slowly erodes your purchasing power.

The Core Concept: Why Allocation Matters

Asset allocation — the split between growth assets (stocks) and stability assets (bonds/cash) — is the single biggest driver of your portfolio's long-term return and short-term volatility. Research by Brinson, Hood, and Beebower found that asset allocation determines over 90% of a portfolio's return variability. Picking individual stocks or market-timing matters far less than getting the big-picture split right.

The basic logic: when you're young and decades from retirement, you can afford to ride out market crashes. When you're 5 years from retirement or already retired, a 40% market drop at the wrong time is catastrophic. The job of asset allocation is to match your portfolio's risk to your actual capacity to absorb losses.

The "110 Minus Age" Rule

The oldest and most widely cited guideline: subtract your age from 110 to get your stock allocation. The remainder goes to bonds.

110 Minus Age Formula:
Stock % = 110 − Your Age
Bond % = Your Age − 10

Age 30: 80% stocks, 20% bonds
Age 40: 70% stocks, 30% bonds
Age 50: 60% stocks, 40% bonds
Age 60: 50% stocks, 50% bonds
Age 70: 40% stocks, 60% bonds

The Modern Update: The 120 Rule

Many financial advisors now use 120 (or even 125) minus age instead of 110, for two key reasons:

  • Longer life expectancies. The original rule was designed when life expectancy was shorter. Today, a 65-year-old may have 25–30 more years. Too much in bonds at 65 means your portfolio grows too slowly to last 30 years.
  • Lower bond yields. Historically, bonds provided 4–5% returns. In the current environment of lower long-term yields, bonds offer less cushion. A larger equity allocation compensates.
Age 110 Rule (Stocks/Bonds) 120 Rule (Stocks/Bonds) Conservative
25 85% / 15% 95% / 5% 80% / 20%
35 75% / 25% 85% / 15% 70% / 30%
45 65% / 35% 75% / 25% 60% / 40%
55 55% / 45% 65% / 35% 50% / 50%
65 45% / 55% 55% / 45% 40% / 60%
75 35% / 65% 45% / 55% 30% / 70%

Target-Date Funds: Automatic Allocation on Autopilot

Target-date funds (also called lifecycle funds) are the most popular retirement investment vehicle for a reason: they do the asset allocation work for you. You pick the fund closest to your expected retirement year — e.g., Vanguard Target Retirement 2045 Fund — and the fund automatically adjusts its stock/bond mix as you age.

In 2025, a 2045 target-date fund (for someone retiring around age 65 in 2045) might be approximately 80% stocks / 20% bonds. By 2040 it might drift to 70/30, and by 2045 to 50/50. This automatic shift is called a "glide path."

Key advantages of target-date funds:

  • Fully automated — no rebalancing required on your part
  • Professionally managed glide path based on actuarial research
  • Instant global diversification within a single fund
  • Low cost (Vanguard's target-date funds have expense ratios around 0.08–0.15%)

The main limitation: target-date funds don't know your personal risk tolerance, Social Security situation, pension income, or other assets. A person with a generous pension who retires at 55 might need a more aggressive allocation than a 2035 fund suggests.

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Glide Paths: Before and Through Retirement

Most people think of asset allocation as a pre-retirement concern. But the allocation strategy you use through retirement (your "through glide path") matters enormously for avoiding sequence-of-returns risk.

Two schools of thought:

  • "To" retirement: Become more conservative right up to retirement, then stay conservative. This minimizes volatility in the retirement years but risks running out of money over a long retirement.
  • "Through" retirement: Continue shifting toward bonds for the first 10–15 years of retirement, then stabilize. Maintains more growth potential, especially important for retirees who may live 30+ years.

Most modern target-date funds use the "through" approach, and most financial planners now agree it's appropriate for healthy retirees with long time horizons.

Rebalancing: How and When

Any target allocation will drift over time as different assets grow at different rates. A 70/30 portfolio might become 80/20 after a strong bull market. Rebalancing means selling some of the outperforming asset (stocks) and buying more of the underperforming one (bonds) to return to your target.

Rebalancing approaches:

  • Calendar rebalancing: Rebalance once per year (common and effective). Pick a date — January 1, your birthday — and stick to it.
  • Threshold rebalancing: Rebalance whenever any asset class drifts more than 5 percentage points from target (e.g., stocks go above 75% or below 65% in a 70/30 target).
  • Cash-flow rebalancing: Direct new contributions (and reinvested dividends) toward underweight asset classes instead of selling. Tax-efficient since you're not triggering capital gains.

Risk Tolerance vs. Risk Capacity

Age-based rules are a starting point, but your personal situation matters as much as your age. Two important concepts:

  • Risk capacity: Your objective ability to absorb losses — based on job security, expenses, other income sources, and time horizon. This is financial.
  • Risk tolerance: Your psychological willingness to stomach losses without panic-selling. This is emotional.

The ideal allocation aligns both. Someone at 60 with a pension covering all basic expenses has high risk capacity and might keep 70% in stocks. Someone at 45 who lost sleep during the 2020 COVID crash should probably be more conservative than the age rule suggests, or they'll sell at the bottom during the next crash — the worst possible outcome.

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes — for most retirees. If you retire at 65 and live to 90, you have a 25-year time horizon. A portfolio of 100% bonds would almost certainly fail to keep up with inflation over that period. Most financial planners recommend maintaining 40–60% in diversified equities well into retirement, especially for the early "go-go" years.
The "bonds" portion typically includes: U.S. government bonds (Treasury notes/bonds), investment-grade corporate bonds, TIPS (Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities), international bonds, and bond mutual funds/ETFs. It may also include cash equivalents like money market funds, CDs, or short-term Treasuries for near-term spending needs. A pension or annuity income can function like a bond in your overall financial picture.
Asset allocation is the high-level split between major asset classes (stocks vs. bonds vs. real estate vs. cash). Diversification is what you do within each asset class — owning many different stocks across sectors and geographies rather than concentrating in a few positions. Both matter. An 80/20 stock-bond split is an allocation decision; owning a total market index fund instead of 5 individual tech stocks is a diversification decision.
Selling stocks after they've already crashed is almost always a mistake — you're locking in losses at the worst time. The correct response to a market crash is usually to stay the course or, if anything, rebalance by buying more equities (which are now cheaper). The time to decide you're too aggressive is before the crash, not during it. If a 30% market decline causes you genuine panic, that's a signal your allocation was more aggressive than your actual risk tolerance supports.

Related guides: Retirement Planning Basics | 401(k) vs. Roth IRA