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How economic reality influences the market.
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Want to do some of your own research – no problems?
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Lump sum love affair
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How much money do you need to comfortably retire?
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You can afford to contribute more to super but .....
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10 most indebted nations
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Timeless lessons meet new challenges
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Securely transferring Your information to your Planner.
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Gender Gap
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The 5 types of earnings per share
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No more Star Trek conventions for Spock
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An introduction to behavioural finance.
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The Budgeting Tools /Calculators on our website have been upgraded.
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Stosur plan an antidote for volatility
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The best performing market over the past 10 years.
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Why it takes courage to stand still
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China buys US for a bargain
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Buckle up for a bumpy US recovery ride
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SMSF Management
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How the US debt downgrade impacts Australia
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Under your control
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5 reasons you should care about Greece
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The more things change ......  (the Carbon Tax)
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Federal Budget 2011-12.   At a Glance
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Reality versus perception
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Improving the financial literacy of your children.
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The Economic Reasons behind Nuclear Power
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Room for improvement (Pensions)
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Uninformed and impatient
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Perspective on the tragedy in Japan.
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The essentials of Corporate cash flow.
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Out in the cold (the self employed)
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Improving financial literacy is an objective we should all have.
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Why baby boomers face a super sprint
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Professional help
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An often overlooked side of SMSFs
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6 basic financial ratios
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When PEG beats the P/E Ratio
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Super Debt
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5 Billionaire habits…
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Five things to do before interest rates go up.
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Commodities Boom Hinges on China
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Debt, Debt and more Debt
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Help your young adult children better understand their financial position.
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Personal Credit Ratings
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Super trouble for women
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Tips for the prospective Landlord.
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Forget those great expectations
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A matter of age.
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Why retirement could be bad for you.
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Saving for a longer life
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Highly complex, highly emotional
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Are you living house poor?
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Attitude of Banks to Insolvency
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The Alphabet Soup of Stocks
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Insolvent Trading Defences
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Market & Economic Update - September 2009
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Dumb, dumber, dumbest
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Business confidence hits six year high
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Matching investment risk tolerance to personality
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Retirement incomes loom as super’s big challenge
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Something remarkable with SMSFs
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A determined tram driver
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Super Fund Members may be Entitled to more Age Pension
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Investments Market Data - 30th June 2009
Matching investment risk tolerance to personality
22nd September 2009
By David Allison, Investopedia.com
CompareShares.com.au  /
www.thebull.com.au

Having a good understanding of an investor's risk tolerance is crucial to any successful advisor/client relationship. It is also a key component of any good investment policy statement. Investment advisors usually explore things like age, size of investment portfolio, expected retirement date and future earnings and financial obligations to gauge an investor's risk tolerance. These quantifiable aspects can tell us a lot about an investor's ability to take investment risk, but what about their willingness?

The importance and complexity of an investor's willingness to take risk is one of the many differentiating factors between managing investment portfolios for large institutions and managing them for individual investors. Because most investment products and programs are developed by institutions for institutions they fail to address this "human side" of risk tolerance. Personality typing is a new tool that is helping investment advisors better understand an individual investor's willingness to take risk and behavioral tendencies. Read on to learn more about what personality typing is, how it can help you gauge risk tolerance, and how it can give you insight into a  investor's decision-making tendencies.

Before we discuss the process of personality typing it is important to understand that individual investors are unique and can not always be perfectly placed into a specific personality type or category. However, personality typing can help facilitate discussions with investors about risk tolerance and can give you insight into investment strategies that may fit their psychological profile.

The Process
The first step in personality typing is to understand the investor's personal background. Interviewing an investor about their life experiences, inherited behavioral traits, career paths, and their current investment portfolio can tell you a lot about their willingness to take risk and whether or not they have a tendency to make emotional decisions regarding their investments. Some investment management firms have developed proprietary client questionnaires to help them with the standardization of this process. Once you have a good understanding of the investors background you can usually place them into a broad personality type.

The CFA Institute's "Candidate Body of Knowledge" lists the four main personality types as cautious, methodical, spontaneous, and individualist. They are categorized below by their willingness to take risk.

Lower Willingness to Take Risk

Cautious
Cautious investors make decisions based primarily on feelings and are very sensitive to investment losses. Fear drives their investment decision making process. They have trouble making proactive decisions regarding their investments and do not trust the advice of others. For this reason, their portfolios usually have low turnover and include mostly safe investments. Possible examples of investors that tend to have cautious personalities might include retired elementary school teachers and elderly widows.
 
Methodical
Methodical investors follow a disciplined, mechanical investing strategy. They make investment decisions based on hard facts and have the tendency to nitpick about small details. They rely heavily on investment research and are not emotional about their investment decisions. They tend to be disciplined investors which can cause them to have a lower risk tolerance. Possible examples of investors that tend to have methodical personalities could include architects and engineers.

Higher Willingness to Take Risk

Spontaneous
Spontaneous investors make investment decisions based on feelings and make them frequently. They are always second guessing themselves and the advice of others and often chase investment fads. For this reason, their investment portfolios usually exhibit high portfolio turnover and may include riskier investments. Possible examples of investors that tend to have spontaneous personalities might include a commission-based salesperson or a young trust fund heir.

Individualist
Individualist investors make decisions based on hard facts and do not second guess their investments often. They exercise independent thinking and put a great deal of trust in their investment research. For this reason, they are usually less risk averse than others. Individualist investors are usually self-made and hard working. Possible examples of investors that tend to have individualist personalities could include a small business owner or an upper level manager in a large corporation.

Arriving at Total Risk Tolerance
An investor's personality type and willingness to take risk can be used in conjunction with information regarding their ability to take risk to better judge their total risk tolerance. Occasionally, an investor's willingness will vary greatly from their ability to take risk. When this occurs, further education about capital markets and investment risk may be required to resolve the issue.

Conclusion
When dealing with individual investors, building a truly customized investment portfolio involves a good understanding of both their ability and willingness to take risk. Most generic investment programs and financial products, like target-date funds, do not properly address an investor's willingness to take risk. The growing acceptance of behavioral finance makes it crucial for investment advisors to use new tools like personality typing to help them better understand an investor's risk tolerance. Although self diagnosis may not always be healthy, personality typing can also be used as a tool to give you insight into your own investment biases and willingness to take risk.


By CompareShares.com.au – for more articles like this please go to this address.

CompareShares.com.au is Australia’s pre-eminent news and investing site for investors and traders, covering shares, superannuation, property, financial planning strategies and more.

 


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