Investing can be similar to riding a rollercoaster — exhilarating highs and stomach-dropping lows, with occasional times you want to yell “Let me off! But what if you predicted the track? No one knows and no one has a crystal ball, but if you understand the relationship between risk and potential returns, you can make smarter, calmer decisions about your investments. When you get into it — no fear-speak — just understanding.
Risk is more than just losing your hard-earned cash. It’s the risk that your investment may not yield the returns you want. Consider it like gardening: even if you do everything right, a storm can destroy your tomatoes, or insects can invade your zucchini. In investing, there are many types of risks:
1.Market Risk: The whole market collapses (the 2008), and takes the floor under your stocks.
2.Inflation Risk: Your returns don’t outpace the growth in prices (i.e., getting 3% return when inflation is at 5%).
3.Credit Risk: The company in which you invested is unable to service its debt (R.I.P., Lehman Brothers).
4.Liquidity Risk: You can’t cash in your investment quickly without dramatically cutting the price (looking at you, real estate).
5.Concentration Risk: Investing a lot (maybe 80%) in one basket (eg crypto).
Here’s the thing: more risk often brings with it more potential reward. But why?
Stocks vs Bonds: Stocks are volatile ( risk) but tend to give an estimated ~7-10% annual returns. Bonds are more stable (low risk), but return an average of only 2-5%.
Starup vs. Blue Chips: Betting on a new tech startup could 10x your investment or go bust. Apple or Coca-Cola? Safer, but slower growth.
This isn’t a coincidence. Because investors require compensation for assuming additional risk. It’s like a dare: “I’ll go on this scary rollercoaster if you give me $100.”
Not every risk is one worth taking. Your job? Counterbalance FOMO (fear of missing out) with peace of mind. Here’s how:
Nope. More risk brings more uncertainty, not guaranteed pay out. For every Bitcoin millionaire, there’s someone who bought at the top and lost 70%.
The real secret? Manage risk strategically. Warren Buffett didn’t amass his fortune through gambling — he chose undervalued companies and held them for decades.
1.Invest Small: Dollar-cost average (keep investing set amounts every month and don’t worry to time the market).
2.Rebalance Each Year: Sell high, buy low — effortlessly.
3.Find the Basics: Learn about index funds (low-cost, diversified) and about ETFs.
Risk is not to be feared; it’s a dial you turn. Up for growth, down for stability. And with this understanding of what is important to you, you will make choices that are aligned with what success means for you.
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