What is the total portfolio approach (TPA)?
The total portfolio approach (TPA) is a practical, flexible investment framework that helps organizations make clearer and more intentional decisions across the entire portfolio. Instead of working through silos or rigid calendar cycles, TPA focuses on portfolio context, objectives, risk budgets, and purposeful allocation.
Recent industry research reinforces this shift. In WTW’s article Beyond Asset Classes: A Total Portfolio Approach (TPA) to Modern Portfolio Construction, the authors explain how TPA challenges traditional asset class boundaries by prioritizing objectives, risks, and outcomes over predefined buckets. They highlight that TPA opens the door to opportunities that may otherwise be overlooked and enables more dynamic, holistic risk management across the entire portfolio.
This page clarifies the most common misconceptions and explains what TPA really means for investors today.
Common myths and realities about TPA
Myth: TPA is only for large or highly sophisticated investors
Reality: TPA doesn’t require massive teams or complex quantitative models. The core principles are accessible to investors of all sizes. No matter the situation, viewing the portfolio holistically and allocating risk intentionally does not require a specific size to transition thinking.
Myth: Investors must choose between TPA and traditional SAA
Reality: We often see the assumption that you must commit entirely to one model. In reality, most investors operate along a spectrum. You can introduce TPA elements gradually into your investment strategy without a full redesign. It’s about a consistent mindset and decision-making that supports total portfolio objectives.
Myth: TPA requires constant change and makes investment governance difficult
Reality: Some believe TPA is overly dynamic. In truth, it brings clarity to investment governance. It replaces calendar-driven activity in favour of real time decisions based on portfolio risk budgets and clearly defined objectives. This improves the quality and consistency of how decisions are made.
Myth: TPA eliminates the need for asset class specialists
Reality: Specialist expertise in equities, credit, and alternatives remains vital. TPA ensures this expertise is best used to select strategies based on their contribution to the whole. The goal is to ensure all asset management decisions are coherent and support wider portfolio goals.
Myth: TPA focuses too much on long-term objectives
Reality: There is a perception that TPA sacrifices short-term accountability. In practice, TPA strengthens short-term discipline. By grounding decisions in long-term purpose and holistic risk management, investors avoid chasing benchmarks while staying aligned with long-term investment outcomes.
