I often write about the idea that an asset’s perceived risk is primarily a function of which risk an investor chooses to consider. If you only consider the risk of a potentially large drawdown from one day or year to the next, stocks certainly appear riskier than bonds or cash. If you consider the risk of running out of money over the course of a long-term retirement, the risk profile shifts.
When it comes to writing about investments, the disclaimers are important. Past performance is not indicative of future returns, my opinions are not necessarily those of TSA Wealth Management and this is not intended to be personalized legal, accounting, or tax advice etc.
When it comes to writing about investments, the disclaimers are important. Past performance is not indicative of future returns, my opinions are not necessarily those of TSA Wealth Management and this is not intended to be personalized legal, accounting, or tax advice etc.
For additional disclaimers associated with TSA Wealth Management please visit https://tsawm.com/disclosure or find TSA Wealth Management's Form CRS at https://adviserinfo.sec.gov/firm/summary/323123