The correct answer is B. Tactical. In the Investment Funds in Canada curriculum, tactical asset allocation is described as a strategy that allows advisors to make short-term or medium-term adjustments to a client’s portfolio in response to changing conditions. These conditions can include market movements, economic outlooks, and importantly, client behavioural tendencies, such as comfort with volatility, emotional responses to losses, or overconfidence during strong markets.
Strategic asset allocation, by contrast, is a long-term, policy-driven approach based on the client’s objectives, time horizon, and risk tolerance, and it is not frequently adjusted. Tactical allocation builds on the strategic framework but permits deviations to better manage perceived risks or client behaviour while still remaining suitable.
The CIFC course emphasizes that advisors must recognize behavioural biases and may use tactical adjustments to help clients remain invested and avoid emotionally driven decisions that could harm long-term outcomes. “Profit maximizing” and “best practical” are not recognized CIFC asset allocation strategies.
Therefore, when an advisor adjusts portfolio risk and return levels to accommodate behavioural tendencies, tactical asset allocation is applied, making Option B the correct answer.