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Diversify Your Holdings With Alternatives To Stocks and Bonds

Investment is perhaps the single most important tool for building wealth. It’s also terrifying.

Stocks and bonds are ways of betting on the success of companies (and sometimes governments). And companies (and sometimes governments!) can go belly-up. Sometimes, the whole market can crash at once, as it did in 2007 and, in even more drastic fashion, 1929. When it does, people can lose their life’s savings. That makes investing a frightening prospect. How can you protect yourself? Should you invest at all?

There are a few things you should know. First, you should absolutely invest. It’s the most effective way to build wealth. Second, you should invest wisely, with plenty of money in safe investments like big “blue chip” companies (which are unlikely to fail) and index funds (which track various measures of the market as a whole, spreading out your risk). A big collapse can still hurt you, but you’ll be at less risk from minor fluctuations. Third, you should have an emergency fund and some savings outside of the market. Not all of your money should be invested!

And, finally, you should consider different types of investments – some of which can be less connected to, and in some cases entirely divorced from, the risks of the stock market.

Investment has inherent risks

There are no shortage of ways to make money grow. Some are systematic and established, like the stock market. Others are pretty much entirely unregulated, like the market for collectible cards.

Any market can collapse. In the 1990s, the internet or dot-com “bubble” (an overvalued market) “popped” (collapsed). Internet stocks plummeted, and people who held lots of them were ruined.

That same decade, the exact same thing happened to baseball cards. Yes, baseball cards. The cards were collected, had value, and were frequently swapped for cash (and each other). And in the 1990s, they abruptly plunged in value.

The point is that any market can collapse. Some markets are less volatile than others, but any investment depends on its ability to change in value. If it can go up, it can go down.

The best way to protect yourself is to diversify. 1990s investors who had both dot-com stocks and lots of stocks in big manufacturing companies did a lot better than those who had only dot-com stocks. Collectors who owned both baseball cards and Star Wars action figures entered the 2000s in better shape than those who had all of their assets in baseball cards.

You can diversify in the stock market by investing in lots of different companies and industries. And you can diversify beyond it by investing in things besides stocks and bonds.

Alternatives to stocks and bonds

Stocks aren’t the only things you can trade. Here are just a few things to consider adding to your portfolio.

These are just a few general types to note in a market that includes everything from French wines to rare coins. The point is, there are plenty of ways to invest outside of stocks. Consider adding one or two alternative investments to diversify your holdings and protect yourself from an economic collapse.