Jan 23, 2023
Get to Know Your Risk Tolerance
Lori Gann Morris, CIMA®, AIF®, CeFT®, Co-Founder / Managing Partner
When constructing a portfolio, it’s critical to understand three important factors: your goals, your time horizon, and your risk tolerance. Of those three, risk tolerance can be the trickiest to get a handle on, especially since it can be determined in large part by your emotions and how well you handle turbulence in the market. Here’s a look at what you need to know.
What is risk tolerance?
To begin getting a handle on risk tolerance, it’s important to understand that different investments have different risk and reward profiles. For example, stocks tend to be relatively risky investments; prices can fluctuate widely in the short term. In return for taking on this risk, stocks offer investors higher potential returns. Bonds, on the other hand, present much less risk. While it’s possible that bond issuers could default, generally speaking, investors receive their investment back plus interest. Bonds’ lower risk profile translates into lower potential returns for investors.
Risk tolerance refers to how much money an investor is willing to lose in the short term for a shot at greater potential gains over the long term. Everyone’s risk tolerance is going to be different and will depend on several factors, including age, income, overall assets, long-term financial goals, and personality.
How to determine your risk tolerance
To figure out your risk tolerance, it can help to ask yourself questions such as:
- What are my investment goals?
- How much investment capital do I have to work with, and do I have other sources of income?
- What is my time horizon? When will I need to liquidate my investment?
- How much of my investment can I stand to lose if the market crashes?
With a clear idea of financial goals in mind, an investor is better positioned to determine what sort of investment assets are likely to help achieve those goals. For example, investors saving for retirement may want to take advantage of the growth potential offered by stocks.
Investors with a stable source of income at their disposal may be in a position to take on more risk with their investable assets.
Time horizon is closely tied to risk tolerance. For example, a younger investor saving for retirement may be willing to devote a higher portion of their portfolio to riskier investments, such as stocks, because they have more time to ride out market volatility and recoup potential losses down the road. Once that same investor begins approaching retirement age, they may find they need the return on their investment to be more predictable, and their risk tolerance will decrease. At that point, they may begin to shift their asset allocation to lower-risk investments, such as bonds and cash.
Finally, it’s important to know yourself. What types of investment decisions will keep you up at night? If you’re losing sleep over market volatility, for example, it might be a good sign that it’s time to a financial advisor about building a more conservative portfolio. If you’re someone with a hardier disposition who makes an investment and doesn’t even look when markets get bumpy, you may be able to tolerate a riskier portfolio.
Developing your portfolio
Once you understand your risk tolerance, we work to allocate assets in your portfolio accordingly. With a high-risk tolerance, you might hold 90% of your portfolio in stocks with just 10% in more conservative investments, for example. With a low-risk tolerance, you might hold 50% of your portfolio in stocks.
We can help you use other tools, such as diversification, to help manage risk and volatility within your portfolio. Holding many types of assets across factors such as sector, size, and geography can help ensure that while some investments may be struggling at a given moment, others may outperform.
Disclosures
Securities offered through Calton & Associates, Inc. Member FINRA/SIPC. Advisory services offered through of Waterloo Capital LP d/b/a AMG Wealth Advisors, an SEC-registered investment advisor. Calton and Waterloo Capital, LP are separate unrelated entities. For more information about Waterloo, or to receive a copy of our disclosure Form ADV, Form CRS and Privacy Policy call 800.266.1723 or visit adviserinfo.sec.gov/Firm/133705.
Information presented is for educational purposes only and does not intend to make an offer or solicitation for the sale or purchase of any securities or to advise on the use or suitability of The AMG Managed Portfolio Series, or any of the underlying securities in isolation. Information specific to the underlying securities making up the portfolios can be found in the Funds’ prospectuses. Please carefully read the prospectus before making an investment decision.
This commentary offers generalized research, not personalized investment advice. It is for informational purposes only and does not constitute a complete description of our investment services or performance. Nothing in this article should be interpreted to state or imply that past results are an indication of future investment returns. All investments involve risk and unless otherwise stated, are not guaranteed. Be sure to consult with an investment & tax professional before implementing any investment strategy.
Investing involves risk. Principal loss is possible. Investing in ETFs is subject to additional risks that do not apply to conventional mutual funds, including the risks that the market price of the shares may trade at a discount to its net asset value(“NAV), an active secondary market may not develop or be maintained, or trading may be halted by the exchange in which they trade, which may impact a fund’s ability to sell its shares. Shares of any ETF are bought and sold at Market Price (not NAV) and are not individually redeemed from the fund. Brokerage commissions will reduce returns. Market returns are based on the midpoint of the bid/ask spread at 4:00pm Eastern Time (when NAV is normally determined for most ETFs), and do not represent the returns you would receive if you traded shares at other times. Diversification is not a guarantee of performance and may not protect against loss of investment principal.