Terrine Friday is a Reuters online editor based in Toronto. The opinions expressed here are her own.
Call it another by-product of the recession: Americans have lost their risk mojo and are slow to return to financial markets after taking a beating in the 2008-09 recession, according to a risk tolerance January 2011 survey released by TD Ameritrade.
“More than half of investors think that being invested in a 10-percent market decline is a worse scenario than missing a 10-percent market increase. That’s a real change in attitude,” said Stuart Rubinstein, managing director of client engagement for TD Ameritrade.
Of those surveyed, 28 percent reported moving more money into bonds or certificates of deposit in order to avoid exposure to risk in the market while 23 percent moved money into managed investment products like mutual funds.
Baby boomers remain the most wary about returning to the market, while younger investors, who are using cash for emergency funds, savings and large purchases, are returning to the market in larger droves.
Generation Y seems to be rebounding a little bit faster: 34 percent of Gen Y investors surveyed report investing new money in the stock market compared to 14 percent for Gen X and 15 percent from baby boomers. Rubinstein says this could also mean Gen Y investors are “nimbler.”
“When we ask older generations the most important financial advice they can give to younger generations, 77 percent said live within your means, 67 percent said start saving for retirementearlier and 47 percent said learn all you can about proper money management,” he says.
Two-thirds of respondents reported that their philosophy for investing is a diversified portfolio with products like mutual funds or exchange-traded funds.