Investment Styles
What Is Your Investment Style?
Knowing what your risk tolerance and investment style are
will help you choose investments more wisely. While there are
many different types of investments that one can make, there
are really only three specific investment styles – and those
three styles tie in with your risk tolerance. The three
investment styles are conservative, moderate, and
aggressive.
Naturally, if you find that you have a low tolerance for
risk, your investment style will most likely be conservative or
moderate at best. If you have a high tolerance for risk, you
will most likely be a moderate or aggressive investor. At the
same time, your financial goals will also determine what style
of investing you use.
If you are saving for retirement in your early twenties, you
should use a conservative or moderate style of investing – but
if you are trying to get together the funds to buy a home in
the next year or two, you would want to use an aggressive
style.
Conservative investors want to maintain their initial
investment. In other words, if they invest $5000 they want to
be sure that they will get their initial $5000 back. This type
of investor usually invests in common stocks and bonds and
short term money market accounts.
An interest earning savings account is very common for
conservative investors.
A moderate investor usually invests much like a conservative
investor, but will use a portion of their investment funds for
higher risk investments. Many moderate investors invest 50% of
their investment funds in safe or conservative investments, and
invest the remainder in riskier investments.
An aggressive investor is willing to take risks that other
investors won’t take. They invest higher amounts of money in
riskier ventures in the hopes of achieving larger returns –
either over time or in a short amount of time. Aggressive
investors often have all or most of their investment funds tied
up in the stock market.
Again, determining what style of investing you will use will
be determined by your financial goals and your risk tolerance.
No matter what type of investing you do, however, you should
carefully research that investment. Never invest without having
all of the facts!
|