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Risk Measures To Review Before
You Invest
by Alan Lavine and Gail Liberman
Are
we finally going to see a good year in the stock market?
A lot depends on future economic growth. We
have to see how the tax cuts and lower interest rates spur the economy. Stock
prices reflect future expectations about the economy and corporate earnings.
Before you invest in any mutual funds, be it
stocks or bonds, it is important understand all the risks. The greater the risk,
the greater the potential return. But over the past three years, investors were
not rewarded for taking risks.
Unfortunately, there are quite a few types of
risks to consider.
Market risk is the risk that your individual
stock, bond or mutual fund will decline if the stock or bond market declines.
There is the risk that bad news about a single
company will send its stock tumbling.
On the bond side, you face interest rate risk.
Bond prices move in opposite directions to interest rates. So when rates rise,
bond prices fall.
There also is inflation risk. The income you
get from your bonds through the years, may not keep pace with rising costs.
Credit risk is the danger that a bond issuer
could go bankrupt.
Lost opportunity risk means that you could lock
into a bond or CD rate today only to miss out on higher-yield investments
tomorrow.
You can evaluate your risk from brokerage firm
reports, Value Line or Morningstar, which can provide measures to help you gauge
the risk of an investment. These measures include:
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Beta. This tells how volatile an investment is
compared with the stock market, as measured by the S&P 500. The stock market has
a beta value of 1. If an investment has a beta value lower than one, it is less
risky. A beta value higher than one means the investment is riskier than the
overall stock market.
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Individual stock recommendations. Brokerage
firm reports, Value Line, Morningstar and Standard & Poor’s, for example, will
provide a rating on securities based on earnings potential and financial
strength. High ratings mean you are less likely to lose your shirt due to bad
news about a company.
On the bond side:
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Look at a bond fund’s “average maturity.” The
shorter the maturity, the less a bond will decline in price when rates rise.
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Duration tells how much your bond or bond
fund’s value will rise or fall with a 1 percent change in interest rates.
- Credit ratings. The
financially strongest bond issuers are rated A to triple A by Standard &
Poor’s and Moody’s. Bonds rate below BBB are issued by companies that are
financially weak.
Alan Lavine and Gail Liberman are
husband-wife personal finance columnists, journalists and authors.
They are the authors of "The Complete Idiot's Guide to Making
Money with Mutual Funds," published by Alpha Books. Their
columns appear in newspapers throughout New England and the
Southeast, as well as online. Their commentary on mutual funds and
personal finance is carried by 200 radio stations nationwide every
Sunday over Business News Network's Charles DeRose Financial Advisor
Show.
More articles by Al and Gail can be
found here.
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