Shifting Your Investment Risk
Should you lower or increase your risk as you get older?By Deborah Jeanne SergeantCynthia Scott is a financial adviser and owner of OMC Financial in DeWitt.At what point should someone segue from high risk–high reward to lower risk–lower reward in their retirement investments?If you’re approaching retirement with a small nest egg, it may feel like it’s time to get as much as you can before you’re ready to retire. But that also places you at higher risk of losing money you will need in the next decade.“It is perfectly OK to transition to a more moderate risk level as one approaches retirement but some percentage of equities — stocks and stock-funding instruments like mutual funds and ETFs — should be a part of any long-term, 4-plus years, investment strategy, even after one retires,” said Randy L. Zeigler, certified private wealth adviser and certified financial planner with Ameriprise Financial Services in Oswego. “Unless one expects to have a short retirement period, the need to hedge inflation is especially important during an extended retirement period, when most pension incomes do not adjust for inflation.” The traditional pattern of buying and keeping investments for decades worked a generation ago, but Terri Krueger, chartered (more…)