An inactive approach means the defensive investor will
seek conservative investments that require little effort in portfolio management, research, and selection of individual investments.
Not exact matches
Hamblin Watsa emphasizes a
conservative value
investment philosophy,
seeking to invest assets on a total return basis, which includes realized and unrealized gains over the long - term.
It was also intended to frustrate holders of
conservative, low - yielding assets, pushing them to
seek higher returns in riskier
investments and thereby fund job - generating business activity — and it seems to be working.
A prudent balance of stocks and bonds A balanced approach: The fund
seeks conservative growth plus income through a mix of roughly 60 % stocks and 40 % bonds.Seeking reduced volatility: The fund's focus on undervalued stocks and primarily high - quality bonds is designed to reduce volatility for
conservative and income - oriented investors.A rigorous process: The fund's experienced portfolio managers use rigorous fundamental
investment research to find opportunities and manage risk.
Age - based
investment options are often a popular choice among families saving for college with a 529 plan because they reallocate a percentage of assets out of equity - based funds (which have more stocks) into more
conservative, income -
seeking funds (such as bond and money market funds) over time.
These strategies are typically more
conservative and
seek modest, consistent growth; which is why Reyes follows this
investment philosophy.
I'm all for the latter shift, but I'm among those who see better prospects of accomplishing that through some mix of a modest, even patriotic, «pay as you go» fee, an eventual end to distorting subsidies — something some
conservatives seek, as well — and boosted and re-focused federal
investments in research and development (and education).
At the same time, the Trump administration and many social
conservatives in Congress are
seeking to limit the federal funding streams on which these providers rely, to roll back the coverage advances of the ACA and to scale back federal
investment in Medicaid.
«What we have done as a lender is to be more
conservative and
seek a higher return on
investment to compensate,» Graves says.