The Silver Lining of Market Downturns

Risk-on. Risk-off.
If you read the financial press, you may have seen the terms “risk-on” and “risk-off”. When investing, there is a risk-return spectrum. Stocks typically have higher risk and higher return potential than high-quality bonds. High-quality bonds have lower risk and lower return potential than stocks, although they typically have higher risk and higher return potential than cash.
In financial speak, investors are:
· Risk-on when they are excited about investing in stocks (and other types of assets that have higher risk profiles). “Risk-on environments can be carried by expanding corporate earnings, optimistic economic outlook, accommodative central bank policies, and speculation. As the market displays strong influential fundamentals, investors perceive less risk about the market and its outlook,” reported Adam Hayes for Investopedia. A risk-on environment may lead to rising stock prices.
· Risk-off when they become cautious and concerned about losses. Risk averse investors may sell some types of stocks (and other types of assets that have higher risk profiles) in favor of dividend-paying stocks and more stable types of investments that can help preserve principal. Risk-off environments may arise when economic growth slows, economic uncertainty rises, company earnings slide lower, consumer confidence wavers, or financial markets experience other kinds of disruptions. A risk-off environment may lead to falling stock prices.
Last week, investors moved from a risk-on to a risk-off outlook. The change in attitude resulted from concerns about:
· Tariffs. Concerns about tariffs intensified last week when “An unexpected move against car imports this week renewed warnings from economists that tariffs will almost surely raise consumer prices and harm economic growth,” reported Jeran Wittenstein and Ryan Vlastelica of Bloomberg.
· Sticky inflation. Last week, the personal consumption expenditures (PCE) index, which is one of the Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation gauges, showed that headline inflation remained steady month to month and year to year. However, core inflation, which excludes food and energy prices, rose month to month and year to year.
· Consumer sentiment. The final reading for consumer sentiment in March did not improve. “This month’s decline reflects a clear consensus across all demographic and political affiliations; Republicans joined independents and Democrats in expressing worsening expectations since February for their personal finances, business conditions, unemployment, and inflation,” wrote University of Michigan Surveys of Consumers Director Joanne Hsu.
During periods of market volatility, it’s important to keep a long-term perspective. Having an asset allocation strategy that reflects your risk tolerance and financial goals helps insulate your assets from market turbulence. Asset allocation helps manage risk, but it does not prevent losses.









