
12 November 2018
12 November 2018
Every investor needs to navigate a number of challenges on their path to building wealth over time. One of the big challenges is how to develop an approach to manage risk in the sharemarket. There are various risk management strategies and tools to help you manage investment risk and maintain the value of your portfolio for the long term. This article discusses some of these strategies.
In simple terms, risk is the potential to experience a loss in your portfolio. The more risk you take on, the more potential there is to experience a loss. One of the primary goals for investors is to avoid losing the capital you’ve built up and invested in the sharemarket. And the way to do this is to limit your potential losses as much as possible.
Putting your money to work in the sharemarket means investing in companies or businesses that might have vastly different prospects for providing a return (or loss) on your investment. When you take on this risk, you’re rewarded with the ability to earn a return through sharing in the company’s profits. Your shareholdings also deliver the potential for future gains if the companies in your portfolio continue to perform well. This is what makes the sharemarket appealing as an investment opportunity.
However, a company could potentially fail to deliver on its goals, which may end up causing its share price to fall. This is why understanding risk management is a crucial step in your journey as an investor.
Shareholders have access to huge amounts of information about their investments, including company reports, news, announcements, and industry analysis. Analysing this information before you make decisions about your investments could help prevent substantial losses.
Defining your personal objectives is a crucial part of risk management. It gives you the ability to understand your risk tolerance, and it’ll inform your behaviours when making decisions about how to invest.
For example, if you’re a younger investor with a timeframe of 30 years to achieve your wealth goals, your approach to risk will be different to an investor who’s older and approaching retirement. Or if your goal is to create a substantial amount of wealth in a shorter period of time, you’ll need to take on a greater level of risk (which increases your potential for loss).
The longer your timeframe is for creating wealth, the more you’ll be able to spread out the level of risk. This won’t rule out your potential for loss, but it can reduce it.
To manage risk appropriately, you need to be an active participant in the management of your portfolio and have a long-term approach. With a long-term timeframe, you may be able to minimise losses because your ability to withstand market fluctuations will be greater. Being active means dedicating your personal time and effort, but there are significant benefits of being active in your decision-making.
Developing a structure for your approach to the sharemarket can be an effective way to maximise your time when managing your portfolio. This can be as simple as a set of rules or guidelines to help you maintain a process when making decisions about your investments.
Consider some of the following factors to help determine your portfolio structure:
Having a portfolio structure is a helpful way to manage your emotional and behavioural response to the constant fluctuations of the sharemarket. It supports your decision-making and directs your behaviour, so you can avoid taking on an excessive level of risk, and minimise your potential for loss.
Every investor will go through times where they executed their approach correctly, only to have the market respond in a way they didn’t anticipate. If this happens, you have the opportunity to reflect on the choices you made when you invested in the particular company or security. Try to learn from the experience by considering:
Reflecting on every investment decision can help you reinforce the behaviours you have learnt as an investor. Despite the potential for an unfavourable outcome, having a sound longer-term strategy makes you more equipped to manage risk and minimise potential loss.
Unfortunately for investors, there’s no way to completely eliminate risk from the sharemarket. However, it is possible to minimise the impact of risk on your investments over the long term, and learning those behaviours will allow you to achieve your goals.
12 November 2018
Discover three strategies for managing investment risk: how to set risk/reward ratios, using conditional orders to protect your portfolio, and the benefits of diversifying your investments.
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Important Information
This information is directed and available to and for the benefit of Australian residents only and is not a recommendation or forecast.
This article is intended to provide general information of an educational nature only. It does not have regard to the financial situation or needs of any reader and must not be relied upon as financial product advice. Investors should consult a range of resources, and if necessary, seek professional advice, before making investment decisions in regard to their objectives, financial and taxation situations and needs because these have not been taken into account. Any securities or prices used in the examples given are for illustrative purposes only and should not be considered as a recommendation to buy, sell or hold. Past performance is not indicative of future performance. Commonwealth Securities Limited ABN 60 067 254 399 AFSL 238814 (CommSec) is a wholly owned, but non-guaranteed subsidiary of the Commonwealth Bank of Australia ABN 48 123 123 124 AFSL 234945 ("the Bank") and both entities are incorporated in Australia with limited liability.