As a finance expert, I often get asked: What’s the right balance between domestic and international mutual funds? The answer isn’t one-size-fits-all. It depends on risk tolerance, investment horizon, and economic conditions. In this guide, I’ll break down how to construct a diversified portfolio using both domestic (U.S.) and international mutual funds.
Table of Contents
Why Diversify Across Borders?
Diversification reduces risk. Holding only U.S. stocks means your portfolio is tied to a single economy. International funds expose you to growth in Europe, Asia, and emerging markets. Historically, U.S. and international stocks don’t move in sync. When the S&P 500 struggles, other markets might thrive.
The Math Behind Diversification
The expected return of a two-asset portfolio is:
E(R_p) = w_d \cdot E(R_d) + w_i \cdot E(R_i)Where:
- E(R_p) = Expected portfolio return
- w_d = Weight of domestic funds
- E(R_d) = Expected return of domestic funds
- w_i = Weight of international funds
- E(R_i) = Expected return of international funds
Portfolio risk (standard deviation) is more nuanced due to correlation (\rho):
\sigma_p = \sqrt{w_d^2 \sigma_d^2 + w_i^2 \sigma_i^2 + 2 w_d w_i \sigma_d \sigma_i \rho_{d,i}}A lower correlation means better diversification benefits.
Historical Performance: U.S. vs. International
| Period | S&P 500 (Annualized Return) | MSCI EAFE (International) |
|---|---|---|
| 1970-2023 | 10.5% | 8.2% |
| 2000-2023 | 7.1% | 4.9% |
| 2010-2023 | 13.2% | 5.8% |
Data Source: Bloomberg, MSCI
The U.S. has outperformed in recent decades, but past performance doesn’t guarantee future results.
How Much Should You Allocate to International Funds?
Academic research suggests:
- Market-Cap Weighting: Global stock markets are ~60% U.S., ~40% international.
- Home Bias: Many U.S. investors overweight domestic stocks due to familiarity.
- Risk-Adjusted Approach: Allocate 20-40% to international funds for diversification.
A Practical Example
Suppose you have $100,000 to invest. You choose:
- 60% U.S. (S&P 500 Index Fund)
- 40% International (MSCI EAFE Index Fund)
If the U.S. returns 8% and international returns 6%, your portfolio return is:
E(R_p) = 0.6 \times 8\% + 0.4 \times 6\% = 7.2\%If correlations are low, volatility could be lower than holding just U.S. stocks.
Risks of International Investing
- Currency Risk – Exchange rates affect returns.
- Political Risk – Unstable governments can hurt markets.
- Higher Costs – International funds often have higher expense ratios.
Tax Considerations
- Foreign Tax Credit: The IRS allows a credit for taxes paid to foreign governments.
- Dividend Taxation: Qualified foreign dividends get lower tax rates.
Final Recommendation
A balanced approach works best:
- Conservative Investors: 20-30% international
- Moderate Investors: 30-40% international
- Aggressive Investors: 40-50% international
Rebalance annually to maintain your target mix.





