DublinHead54
Registered User
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That doesn't matter. They are wrong.
Volatility is short term risk.
It is of very little meaning to a long-term investor.
The industry likes volatility because they can measure it.
It's a very poor substitute for risk.
A deposit which has reduced in real value consistently over the last 20 years would be regarded as zero risk. Whereas an asset with an average return of 5% but yo yoing about would have very high volatility.
Brendan
Brendan, volatility is not a short term measure, it can be measured against any length of historical data. What you are quoting likely is the VIX index / futures products and option models that generally use 3 month maturity for pricing. Volatility is not short term risk nor is it a substitute for risk, it is a component of risk.
Anyway we are off topic, happy to discuss risk management via Private message.
Again for the poster I suggest they talk to some financial planners and wealth managers. I would also disregard some comments here about Wealth Managers just trying to sell you products to make commission. The industry is highly regulated now (MIFID II) and you should be able to act in confidence that they aren't trying to rip you off.