Crescent Asset Management rejects traditional stock/bond allocations. Instead, they structure portfolios into four time-based buckets (e.g., 0-3 years, 3-7 years) to meet specific lifestyle cash flow needs, thereby insulating clients from market volatility.
Reconcile contradictory advice by segmenting your capital. Hold years of living expenses in cash for short-term security and peace of mind. Separately, invest money you won't need for 10-25 years into assets to combat long-term inflation. The two strategies serve different, non-conflicting purposes.
Offering daily liquidity while pursuing a multi-year investment strategy creates a dangerous duration mismatch. When investors inevitably demand their cash during a downturn, the long-term thesis is shattered, forcing fire sales and destroying value. A fund's liquidity terms must align with its investment horizon.
The speaker divides his portfolio into two distinct categories: stable, long-term "Quality Businesses" and high-growth "Micro-cap Inflection Point" businesses. Each bucket has its own specific criteria, allowing for a balanced approach between reliable compounding and high-upside opportunities.
According to investor Mike Green, your investment portfolio is secondary to your life's goals. Frame financial planning around a 'calendar of events'—major life needs and cash flows—first. The portfolio's role is to serve that calendar, not exist as an end in itself.
The modern market is driven by short-term incentives, with hedge funds and pod shops trading based on quarterly estimates. This creates volatility and mispricing. An investor who can withstand short-term underperformance and maintain a multi-year view can exploit these structural inefficiencies.
Simply "thinking long-term" is not enough. A genuine long-term approach requires three aligned components: 1) a long-term perspective, 2) an investment structure (like an open-ended fund) that doesn't force short-term decisions, and 3) a clear understanding of what "long-term" means (10 years vs. 50 years).
Advisors who recommend fixed allocations like 60/40 without considering current expected returns and risk are committing a form of 'malpractice.' Investment decisions must be dynamic, as the relationship between risk and return is not constant over time.
Crescent Asset Management's core investment philosophy is to use public markets for cheap, passive beta exposure. They concentrate their active management efforts on private markets, where they believe an informational and access-based edge can be used to generate true alpha.
Called "upside investing," this strategy involves creating a baseline financial plan using only safe assets, assuming all stock investments go to zero. This establishes a guaranteed floor for your living standard, ensuring any market gains are purely upside without risking your core lifestyle.
Contrary to the retail investor's focus on high-yield funds, the 'smart money' first ensures the safety of their capital. They allocate the majority of their portfolio (50-70%) to secure assets, protecting their core fortune before taking calculated risks with the remainder.