Evaluating Investment Advice
An investment advisor provides the following recommendations to two different clients. Evaluate the appropriateness of the advisor's recommendations for each client, justifying your assessment based on the typical year-to-year variation in returns for major asset classes.
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Risk-Return Trade-off and the Risk Premium
An investor is analyzing the historical performance of three different asset classes in their portfolio over several decades. They create a chart showing the year-to-year percentage change in value for each. Asset X shows very large fluctuations, with frequent double-digit gains and losses. Asset Y shows moderate fluctuations, less extreme than Asset X but still significant. Asset Z shows very small, stable fluctuations, rarely changing by more than a few percentage points in a year. Based on long-term international data, which option most likely identifies these assets?
Investor Recommendation Based on Asset Volatility
Portfolio Risk Assessment
Based on extensive long-term data from multiple countries, arrange the following asset classes in the correct order, from the one with the highest year-to-year variation in returns (most volatile) to the one with the lowest.
An investor's primary goal is to construct a portfolio with the lowest possible year-to-year variation in returns. Based on long-term comparative studies across many countries, this investor should prioritize investments in residential housing over both equities and short-term bonds.
Match each asset class with the description of its typical year-to-year variation in returns (volatility), based on long-term international data.
Investor Strategy and Asset Volatility
Of the three primary asset classes—equities, housing, and short-term bonds—long-term international data consistently shows that ____ exhibit the highest year-to-year variation in returns, making them the most volatile.
Evaluating Investment Advice
Two financial advisors are discussing a strategy for a client who wants to build a portfolio with the lowest possible year-to-year variation in returns.
- Advisor A states: 'The client should focus on residential real estate. It's a physical asset, so its value doesn't fluctuate as wildly as the stock market.'
- Advisor B counters: 'While real estate is less volatile than stocks, a portfolio concentrated in short-term bonds would experience even smaller year-to-year fluctuations.'
Based on long-term international data comparing these asset classes, which advisor's reasoning provides the most accurate guidance for this specific client goal?