Wealth as a Prerequisite for Bearing Investment Risk
To benefit from the high potential returns of risky assets like equities, households must possess sufficient wealth. This wealth provides the financial capacity to absorb potential investment losses, a necessary condition for undertaking the risks associated with high-return investments.
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Ch.6 The financial sector: Debt, money, and financial markets - The Economy 2.0 Macroeconomics @ CORE Econ
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Asset Choice as a Reflection of Wealth-Based Risk Aversion
Lower Average Investment Returns for the Less Wealthy Due to Risk Aversion
Wealthy Individuals' Use of Leverage to Amplify Returns
Wealth as a Prerequisite for Bearing Investment Risk
Impact of Wealth-Based Risk Aversion on Major Life Decisions
Situational Risk Aversion's Role in Perpetuating Wealth Inequality
Investment Decision Scenario
Two individuals, Maya and Liam, are each offered an identical business venture that requires a significant financial outlay. The venture has a high probability of failure but promises an exceptionally large profit if successful. Maya, who has substantial personal savings and multiple sources of income, decides to invest. Liam, who has minimal savings and relies on a single, modest salary to support his family, declines the opportunity. Which of the following principles best explains their different decisions?
A person with a net worth of $50,000 is likely to be more willing to risk losing $10,000 in a gamble than a person with a net worth of $5 million, because the potential loss is the same absolute amount for both.
Explaining Risk Aversion and Wealth
The Impact of Wealth on Financial Decision-Making
Match each individual's financial profile with the investment decision that best reflects their likely degree of situational risk aversion.
Startup Investment Decision
A government program offers to match 50% of the initial investment for any new startup to encourage entrepreneurship. Based on the principle that an individual's financial situation influences their willingness to take risks, which group is likely to be the most hesitant to participate?
Two individuals start with different levels of personal wealth. The less wealthy individual consistently chooses to place their savings in a low-risk, low-return bank account. The wealthier individual consistently invests in a diversified portfolio of stocks, which has higher average returns but also greater volatility and risk of loss. Assuming this pattern continues for several decades, what is the most probable long-term effect on the wealth difference between them?
A small-scale farmer with minimal savings and a large agricultural corporation both face the decision of whether to plant a new, genetically modified crop. This new crop has the potential for a 50% higher yield than traditional crops but is also highly susceptible to a specific type of drought that occurs periodically in the region. The traditional crop is resilient to drought but offers a much lower, yet stable, yield. The corporation decides to plant the new crop on a large portion of its land, while the small-scale farmer chooses to stick with the traditional crop. What is the most likely economic explanation for the farmer's decision?
Explaining Risk Aversion and Wealth
Wealth as a Prerequisite for Bearing Investment Risk
An investor is comparing two financial assets. Asset X has historically shown an average annual gain of 15%, but its value has also experienced drops of up to 30% in a single year. Asset Y has consistently provided an annual gain of 2%, and its value has never decreased by more than 1% in a year. Based on this information, what is the most accurate conclusion about the relationship between potential gains and potential losses for these assets?
Investment Strategy Evaluation
Evaluating the Nature of Stock Market Investing
An investment that offers the possibility of very high financial gains over a short period is generally considered to have a low level of risk.
Explaining the Risk-Return Tradeoff
Match each investment scenario with its most likely risk and return profile.
In finance, the principle that an investment with the potential for greater financial gains also carries a greater potential for financial loss is known as the - tradeoff.
Arrange the following financial assets in order from the lowest typical risk and return potential to the highest typical risk and return potential.
Asset Allocation and Time Horizon
A well-established company announces it is discontinuing its stable, profitable product line to invest all its resources into developing a new, experimental technology that could be revolutionary if successful. How does this strategic shift most likely alter the characteristics of the company's stock as an investment?
Learn After
Evaluating Investment Suitability
An individual with a large financial cushion (e.g., significant savings, property) and an individual with very limited savings are both considering investing in the stock market, which offers the potential for high returns but also carries the risk of substantial losses. Which of the following statements most accurately analyzes their likely investment decisions?
Wealth and Investment Risk-Taking
Evaluating Universal Investment Advice
Because investments like stocks historically offer high average returns, it is a financially sound strategy for any individual, regardless of their current financial situation, to allocate a significant portion of their savings to these types of assets to build wealth.