Note: that is part one of a two part article. Here is part two [1].
Spoiler: "Indeed — except for known, near-term financial obligations like a large tax bill that you might owe on April 15 or a down payment on a house you’re buying in the next few months — the best asset allocation, nearly all the time, is 100 percent stocks."
Here is the HN discussion of the second part from a few days ago [2], although I'm not sure it counts as a discussion since there was only one comment.
Spoiler: "Indeed — except for known, near-term financial obligations like a large tax bill that you might owe on April 15 or a down payment on a house you’re buying in the next few months — the best asset allocation, nearly all the time, is 100 percent stocks."
Here is the HN discussion of the second part from a few days ago [2], although I'm not sure it counts as a discussion since there was only one comment.
[1] http://www.nytimes.com/2016/02/13/your-money/how-much-of-you...
[2] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=11105038