Friday, December 3, 2010

An Investor’s View of Risk

High wireIn the real world, investors define risk in a variety of ways.  Mention risk, and many will begin to imagine total, irrevocable, gone-forever loss of their principal.  Fluctuation is not loss of principal.  It is just fluctuation.  Here’s an example that should make the difference clear.  Let’s say you decided that your backyard contains oil. After a million dollars spent drilling, it turns out that there is no oil.  No matter what you do, no matter how long you look at the well, no matter what happens to the price of oil, your money is gone. You have had an irrevocable loss of capital.

Let’s say that you took the same million dollars and bought a diversified investment portfolio (stocks, bonds, hedge funds, proactive asset management).  You then have an unusually bad result the first year, and lose 20 percent of your investment.  Well, you have had an interesting fluctuation, but have not had a capital loss if you can refrain from doing the very worst possible thing and pulling your money out of those investments while the values are down. 

Markets have always recovered in the past. Some took longer than originally anticipated, others faster than anyone can expect.  History indicates that all you must do to recover and go on to acceptable profits is to hang tight.  While an individual stock can go certainly to zero (think Enron, Lehman, and countless others), entire markets don’t.  Except for war or revolution, I am unaware of any market that has gone down without recovering.  As long as we expect the world’s economy to continue to move, the value of the securities markets will reflect that movement. 

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