Risk Is Not What Most People Think
What you'll learn
Risk is broader than market declines.
1Types of Risk
Risk includes market volatility, inflation risk, concentration risk, behavioral risk, longevity risk, and sequence risk.
- Market volatility: Prices rise and fall over time.
- Inflation risk: Money loses purchasing power over long periods.
- Concentration risk: Too much dependence on a single investment, company, or industry.
- Behavioral risk: Emotional decisions made during moments of fear or enthusiasm.
- Longevity risk: Outliving retirement savings.
- Sequence risk: Large market drops at the start of withdrawals during retirement.
2Why Risk Feels Emotional
News headlines focus on crashes, volatility, panic, and uncertainty. That can make investing feel dangerous even before understanding how it works. But temporary declines are one type of risk. Permanent financial damage is another. Understanding the difference matters.
3Emotional Decisions
Panic selling during downturns often creates more lasting damage than the decline itself.
- Panic selling during downturns
- Chasing performance after rallies
- Abandoning long-term plans
- Reacting to headlines instead of following a strategy
Good to Know
Disciplined planning matters precisely because emotional decisions tend to happen at the worst possible moments.
4Inflation Is a Quiet Risk
Money sitting in low-interest accounts slowly loses purchasing power even when the balance looks stable.
5Diversification Is About Probability, Not Prediction
Diversification does not guarantee gains or eliminate losses. Instead, it seeks to reduce dependence on a single outcome. Professional portfolio construction generally relies on probabilities, different possible outcomes, and long-term behavior — not certainty.
6The Investing Paradox
Investment analysis relies heavily on historical information. At the same time, nearly all financial disclosures remind investors: past performance does not guarantee future results. Investing is not about certainty. It is about managing uncertainty thoughtfully. Long-term investing tends to depend more on discipline, patience, diversification, and behavior than on prediction.
Joe's Rule of Thumb
“The biggest financial risk is often not a market crash — it is making emotional decisions during one.”
Educational Information Only
MWM Financial Awareness provides general educational information only. Content is not individualized investment, tax, legal, insurance, or retirement plan advice. Pension and benefit rules vary by plan. Members should review official plan documents and consult the appropriate plan administrator or qualified professional before making decisions.
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