Tipo de producto
Ideas destacadas
Recursos adicionales
¿No eres un inversor particular? Para acceder a contenido más relevante, por favor, actualiza tu tipo de usuario.
Capital en riesgo. El valor de las inversiones y el ingreso que se obtenga de ellas pueden subir o bajar y no están garantizados. Es posible que no recuperes la cantidad que invertiste.
¿Eres un inversor profesional? Más información >
Los inversores a menudo empiezan llenando sus carteras con fondos gestionados por los gestores de fondos mejor calificados. Sin embargo, la realidad es que seleccionar los "mejores" fondos no garantiza obtener las "mejores" carteras.
Aquí hay tres hábitos comunes a algunos de nuestros inversores de más éxito.
Descargar ahora¿Eres un inversor profesional? Más información >
Los inversores de éxito comienzan a invertir considerando primero los riesgos que están dispuestos a asumir. Consideran, con detenimiento, las clases de activos en las que quieren invertir para facilitar la construcción de una cartera equilibrada.
¿Entiendes el riesgo de tu cartera?
Es importante identificar qué impulsa la rentabilidad dentro de tu cartera. Los inversores de éxito pueden seleccionar los vehículos de inversión más apropiados para obtener los resultados más deseados.
¿Sabes qué es lo que está generando rentabilidad en tu cartera?
A medida que crece el universo de inversión, hay más oportunidades y opciones a la hora de seleccionar herramientas de inversión. Los inversores de éxito se han dado cuenta de que no existe una sola forma de invertir.
¿Has pensado en qué herramientas utilizas?
¿Eres un inversor profesional? Más información >
Consulta nuestra gama de productos y construye una mejor cartera
Explorar más ahoraWe’ve found that successful investors begin by carefully considering the risk they are prepared to take, as this can be easily controlled by carefully choosing the assets they invest in. For example, an investor who wants less risk might make sure that a large part of their portfolio is invested in lower-risk bonds.
The aim is to design a portfolio that balances the return an investor wants with the risk they can afford to take.
Instead of buying heavily into one kind of investment that could drop in value and bring your whole portfolio down, the right balance of investments keeps successful investors diversified across the market.
Investors who have given thought to the asset classes they want to invest in, and their broad market exposure, have a much better understanding of their portfolio and the risks they are taking.
This is key to achieving investment goals.
LOREM IPSUMYour time horizon: This refers to how many months, years, or decades you have to achieve your financial and investment goals.
Your time horizon will influence how much risk you are prepared to take. Someone 25 years old and just starting to invest could potentially afford to make more risky investments, as there’s more time to recover from steep price falls. Someone close to retirement might want to be invested in a more cautious way.
Here is a simple example of how an investor’s spread of investments (also known as asset allocation) could change from their 20s through to the years to retirement.
Your attitude to risk: How much risk are you comfortable with? Could you handle losing some, or all, of your investment for the chance of a higher return?
Unlike your time horizon, your attitude to risk is personal. Some investors love the thrill of chasing high-risk returns, others may feel they have enough risk in their lives – with their career choice for example – and they would rather be cautious investors.
It’s worth remembering that adventurous, higher risk investments do not always provide better returns. Take a look at these graphs that compare annualised risk and annualised return over different time frames.
** These graphs show why it is crucial to consider your time horizon, as well as your own level of tolerance to the amount of money that you might lose on any given day, month or year.
LOREM IPSUMChoosing the spread of investments best suited to you doesn’t have to be complicated. We think index funds and Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs) are excellent tools to help investors put their plans into practice.
Fund managers are expected to make stock choices that lead them to beat their benchmarks. But these stock choices all have implications for the risk of the fund and on the overall portfolio risk.
Picking the right funds or shares is not what will define your success. Considering the risk of your investment portfolio as a whole is a better approach that will ensure your investment choices are driving towards your goal.
Wide-ranging research since the 1980s proves that an average 90% of the variability in a portfolio’s return can be explained by the markets and the investment factors the portfolio is exposed to.
This means only 10% of the variability in a portfolio’s return is due to a manager’s deliberate decisions, such as choosing a particular stock or bond to buy.
Because they know that portfolio outcomes are driven mainly by broad market exposures, successful investors tend to use more index investments, such as ETFs and index mutual funds, in their portfolios.
As index investing is much cheaper, this lowers the overall cost of the portfolio and reduces the need to search for alpha-seeking managers. This allows investors to select just the few fund managers they believe can outperform the market.
With the growing number of investment tools available to investors, it is becoming obvious that there is not just Every kind of investing can now be done via an index. If you want to invest in, for example, China, technology, sustainability, long-term megatrends, and gold – there is an index investment that can put the plan into action, cheaply and simply.
There’s been a vast increase in the ways that investors can diversify, and successful investors have regularly reviewed their choices and made changes to take advantage of all the new possibilities.
With so many index strategies available, the high fees charged by alpha-seeking managers are less justifiable, especially for long-only strategies. Many successful investors have been able to achieve manager-beating outcomes much more cost effectively by indexing.