Is It Time to Reassess Your Risk Tolerance?

Market shocks are an inevitable part of investing—but that doesn't make them any easier to stomach. Whether you're just starting out or you've been saving for decades, watching the value of your hard-earned gains drop overnight can cause you to question the entire enterprise.
When the market is going up, it's easy for investors to think they're more comfortable with risk than they actually are. But whenever the S&P 500® Index drops into bear-market territory, people may be forced to confront their true risk tolerance—as well as their capacity, or ability, to take risk.
So, how do you go about reassessing your tolerance for risk, come what may? Ask yourself these three questions.
1. How much can I stand to lose emotionally?
Investing is an act of faith—to say nothing of willpower. The assets that offer the highest potential reward are often the riskiest, but if you can steel yourself against occasional surges in volatility, you're more likely to reach your long-term goals.
The question is, how much risk can you really handle? To help answer that question, consider the downsides and upsides of five hypothetical portfolios:
More pain, more potential gain
Consider five hypothetical portfolios—from conservative (smallest allocation to stocks) to aggressive (largest allocation to stocks)—with an initial investment of $10,000.

When looking at average annual returns, the greater the allocation to stocks, the greater the potential upside . . . but also the greater potential downside.

After time, the portfolios with greater stock allocations had significantly larger values than those with smaller allocations.

資料來源:嘉信理財金融研究中心,數據由 Morningstar, Inc. 公司提供。數據從 1970 年 1 月 1 日到 2024 年 9 月 30 日。
假設保守配置由 15% 的大型股、5% 的國際股票、50% 的債券和 30% 的現金投資組成。假設的適度保守配置是 25% 大型股、5% 小型股、10% 國際股票、50% 債券和 10% 現金投資。假設的溫和配置是 35% 的大型股、10% 的小型股、15% 的國際股票、35% 的債券和 5% 的現金投資。假設的溫和進取型配置是 45% 的大型股、15% 的小型股、20% 的國際股票、15% 的債券和 5% 的現金投資。假設激進的配置是 50% 大型股、20% 小型股、25% 國際股票和 5% 現金投資。顯示的回報數字是假設資產配置的複合平均、最小和最大年度總回報。假設資產配置是用於代表每個資產類別的指數表現的加權平均值,每年重新平衡一次。總回報包括股息、利息和其他現金流的再投資。代表每個資產類別的指數包括 S&P 500 ® 指數(大型股)、Russell 2000 ® 指數(小型股)、MSCI EAFE ® Index-Net of Taxes(國際股票)、彭博美國綜合債券指數(債券)和富時美國3個月國庫券指數(現金投資)。 CRSP 6-8 指數用於 1979 年之前的小型股,Ibbotson 中期政府債券指數用於 1976 年之前的債券,Ibbotson 美國 30日有效國庫券指數用於 1978 年之前的現金投資。示例為假設的,僅供說明之用。它並非代表特定的投資產品。指數不受管理,不產生管理費、成本和開支,也不能直接投資。有關指數的更多信息,請參閱schwab.com/indexdefinitions。過往的表現不能保證未來結果。投資涉及風險,包括損失本金。平均值、最佳、最差值包括截至 09/30/2024 。
Although portfolios with larger allocations to stocks have historically delivered higher returns over time, they have also been more volatile—which may not work for everyone. If you need the money in the next few years, for example, you should choose a more stable investment mix. The same is true if you simply can't bear to see your portfolio plummet in value.
It's perfectly reasonable to accept lower returns in exchange for more stability, but depending on your objective, that may mean you may have to save more—or ratchet back your expectations—to compensate.
Indeed, reducing your exposure to stocks and other relatively higher-risk, potentially higher-reward assets during your peak earning years comes could cause you to fall short of your goal. Market turbulence feels risky because it's something you have to face again and again. But if you have long-term goals, the more pernicious risk comes from undercutting your long-term returns because there's often no coming back from that.
2. How much can I stand to lose financially?
While many people think about risk in terms of their ability to endure losses emotionally, there's another component to risk that's equally important: your capacity to recover financially.
Time is a big factor here. When you've got a decade or more until you need to tap your savings, short-term volatility isn't a big risk. But if you'll need the money in, say, five or fewer years, a market downturn can be devastating.
Be that as it may, your financial capacity for risk may not square with your emotional tolerance for it. An investor in their 40s, for example, probably has 20 or more years until retirement, which should allow them to invest aggressively. But some people simply can't tolerate the ups and downs of holding that much stock, regardless of their age or time frame.
Conversely, even aggressive investors can be waylaid by adverse life events like losing a job. If you need to tap your long-term savings to make ends meet, your capacity for risk can shrink overnight. In such situations, downshifting your exposure to help preserve capital could absolutely be the right approach.
Of course, in a perfect world your financial plan would have a built-in cushion for such emergencies. With an emergency fund in place, you're less likely to need to tap your long-term investments to cover short-term expenses.
Nonretirees should maintain at least three (and ideally six) months' worth of essential expenses in a highly liquid account. However, if you're nearing or in retirement, it may make sense to increase your emergency fund savings to support at least a year's worth of spending, and then in a separate account or as part of your portfolio, dedicate another two to four years' worth of anticipated expenses to historically more stable investments such as high-quality bonds or bond funds. Keeping that much cash and short-term investments can help you avoid having to sell assets during a downturn.
3. How well do I know myself?
It's difficult for investors to predict in advance how they'll respond to a given set of market conditions, such as a down market, until it occurs. Consider asking someone close to you to rate your risk tolerance. You might think you're comfortable with risk, but your spouse or a close friend may be able to identify patterns of behavior—such as your tendency to play it safe in other areas of your life—that you're unable to recognize in yourself.
Financial advisors are ideally suited to this role because their experience with a broad range of clients can lend some perspective on where you fall along the spectrum of risk tolerance. As they get to know you, they can remind you how you felt, or reacted, in prior down markets and may also be able to help you identify whether you're acting with your head—or your heart.
An advisor can help you "ignore the noise," like short-term market fluctuations and sensational headlines, to curtail the emotional responses that might otherwise get the best of you. In fact, one of the most significant services an advisor can provide is helping you stay the course—based on a true and impartial assessment of your risk tolerance as well as your capacity to take risk—should you ever need money from your portfolio during a market downturn.
Don't let your feelings get you down
Investors who frequently acted on their emotions and moved their money in and out of funds during market volatility had smaller returns than the average fund return over 5- and 10-year periods.

資料來源:嘉信金融研究中心,數據由晨星公司提供,截至 2023 年 12 月 31 日。
基金回報是晨星國內股票、專業股票和國際股票類別中所有主動型基金的加權平均時間加權回報。每支基金都以其最早的股份類別表示。每支基金的投資者回報由晨星計算,反映基於每月預估淨資金流量所投資的所有資金的平均回報。投資者平均回報和平均基金回報是按每支基金規模加權的平均值。分析僅包括具有基金回報和投資者回報的基金。過往表現不能保證未來結果。
You can't wish your emotions away, but try to keep them in check. An advisor can guide you through reviewing your portfolio against your broader financial plan during market swings—as well as anytime your situation changes substantially.
Bottom line
While it's wise to take into account your age and time frame when managing your portfolio, your risk tolerance ultimately comes down to figuring out how much risk you can really afford financially, and handle emotionally. Once you know that, you can put together a plan that balances your long-term need for growth with your near-term need to manage your impulses.