Do You Know Your Investment Risk Capacity?
Investment Risk Capacity
To download a six-page summary explaining risk capacity, click on the following link:
Have you ever heard the term “Risk Capacity”?
Chances are very high that you have not. Why is that?
Most financial professionals focus on the more commonly known term of “Risk Tolerance.”
Risk Tolerance is someone’s personal attitude about investment risk, e.g., how comfortable someone is with dramatic losses in their investment portfolio when the stock market goes negative.
Risk tolerance is emotion-based.
What is Risk Capacity? It’s a bit tough to define so I’ll give you a few definitions:
A classic definition is the amount of risk you need to take in order to reach your investment goals (either asset accumulation, income in retirement, or both).
A different way to define risk capacity is whether an investor is in a position to assume risk and if so, how much (will negative returns adversely affect the investment goals/objective).
Risk capacity is an emotionless risk metric that only looks at someone’s financial well-being and then mathematically determines their ability (capacity) to take investment risks.
The following are the traditional items you’d look at to formulate someone’s baseline risk capacity:
1) What assets do you currently have to reach your financial goal(s)?
2) Are you fully employed, part-time, unemployed, or retired?
3) What is your annual income?
4) How much is in your emergency fund?
5) What are your future financial commitments?
6) When do you need access to your money?
Those who start with or have more assets, those who have full-time jobs and ones that are high paying, those who have more in their emergency fund than those who do not, those who don’t have minor children in the house and the expenses that go with them, and those who can wait longer to access to their retirement funds will have a higher risk capacity.
Why does risk capacity matter and how is it used?
Risk capacity, if used properly by a financial planner or insurance agent, will help the advisor determine what investments and/or insurance or annuity products are most “suitable” for clients.
Without incorporating the use of risk capacity, it doesn’t mean that recommendations from an advisor will be terrible, but they will not be as good as they could be.
Since most people would prefer that any advice they receive be as good as it can be, I would recommend that everyone seek out an advisor who has the ability to incorporate risk capacity into their planning.
Why don’t more advisors use risk capacity when giving advice?
One main reason is because most investment risk software doesn’t deal with risk capacity. We happen to use investment risk software that incorporate both risk capacity and risk tolerance and think our clients are better off because of it.
Want to know your personal risk capacity and risk tolerance?
If you do, all you need to do is click on the following link and take a few minutes to fill out an online questionnaire. Afterward you will be given your own personal risk score that incorporates both risk capacity and risk tolerance.
Insert link from your OnPointe Risk program for the new questionnaire
Questions? If you have any questions about risk capacity or want to discuss your own personal risk capacity, please feel free to email or give me a call.
Creative Solutions
Our goal for each client is to bring all our recourses to bear in an effort to give time-tested solutions for today and beyond.
Professional Team
Our affiliates span the financial landscape. We want to always use client first solutions no matter where we need to turn.
Diverse Approach
We don’t believe in the sales culture, but instead we believe in the service culture. Our approach is to dig in and get to the core issues.
Our Approach
We always start with people. Business is driven by human behavior. We take a human-centered design approach to portfolios and wealth planning. Through observation, learning, and immersive research we are able to roadmap solutions that work for our clients.
Papers, graphs, charts don’t amount to much without proper implementation. We take the time to carefully and thoughtfully see our plan put to work. The end goal is to have a wealth accumulation as well as a wealth preservation strategy.