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Understanding Risk Types of Investment Risk and How to Minimize Them Provided by Russell Investment Group When you're investing for retirement, your first impulse may be to choose the "safest" investment for your savings plan. After all, you want to do what you can to help make sure the money will be there for your future. But before making your investment decisions, it's important to understand the types of risk and to know that perhaps the riskiest thing you could do is not invest your money at all. Types of Risk
The following sections detail market risk and inflation risk. Market Risk When you're investing for retirement, it may seem like you want to choose the investment with minimal short-term ups and downs. However, it's not that simple because there's another kind of risk to be aware of—inflation risk. To keep up with inflation, you can invest in fixed-income investments, such as investment contracts and bonds, which are generally considered lower risk. They pay a relatively stable rate of return approximating the rate of inflation. The organizations that issue fixed-income investments—including highly rated insurance companies and banks, the U.S. government, and major corporations—tend to have a high level of creditworthiness, and therefore, less credit risk. To do significantly better than inflation, you must be able to accept the risk of more variable asset classes such as stocks. The value of your investments will fluctuate more in the short term. But historically, stocks have consistently come back after short-term downturns and, over a typical market cycle, have outperformed nearly all other traditional investments in this century. Long-term, stocks have beaten inflation by a wide margin. Inflation Risk How Inflation Works Inflation can best be described as the rise in the price of goods and services and equated with money's loss of purchasing power. Inflation also affects income. As prices go up, income generally rises, too, somewhat negating, but rarely offsetting, the long-term impact of inflation. Inflation's Impact on Investments The following chart shows how inflation can eat up much of the growth of so-called "low-risk" investments over the long term. Sources: 1: Consumer Price Index; 2: Salomon Brothers 3-Month Treasury Bill Index; 3: S&P High-Grade Corporate Bond Index through 1973; Lehman Brothers Government/Corporate Bond Index since 1973; 4: S&P 500 Index
Minimizing Risk Remember: Most investments involve some form of risk. But so does doing nothing. It's important to understand the different types of risks and accept the one that best suits your needs. You can strike a balance between risk and return through a well-diversified portfolio. Diversification—spreading your money among many different investments—is a widely accepted method of minimizing investment risks. Source: Russell Investment Group Russell Investment Group is a registered trade name of Frank Russell Company, a Washington USA corporation, which operates through subsidiaries worldwide. Russell is a subsidiary of The Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company and is the owner of the trademarks, service marks and copyrights related to its respected indexes. Russell Funds are offered through Network Representatives who are Registered Representatives of Northwestern Mutual Investment Services, LLC (NMIS). All securities are offered through Northwestern Mutual Investment Services LLC, (NMIS), Suite 300, 611 E. Wisconsin Avenue, Milwaukee, WI 53202, 1-866-664-7737. Member NASD and SIPC. NMIS is wholly owned by Northwestern Mutual. |
