Thursday, December 22, 2011

Measuring Investor Risk

I have used FinaMetrica's investor risk profile for several years to attempt to assess clients' ability to accept risk. FinaMetrica's found, Geoff Davey, was recently featured in an online interview I viewed. Davey identified three distinct forms of risk that investors confront.

Required risk measures the extent to which investors must expose themselves to market volatility and losses in effort to receive the returns they need to achieve their goals. We can use standard deviation as a means of measuring this risk.

Risk capacity refers to the investors' ability to accept losses. If an investor has a $10 million portfolio, a $50,000 loss is not a big deal. The loss is just ½ of 1%. An investor with a $500,000 portfolio would have lost 10%. A very big deal.

Risk tolerance is a psychological construct. It's a personality trait. It's what FinaMetrica measures with their profile.

When I write an investment policy statement for a client, I refer to all three kinds or risk.

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