7 steps to surviving investment volatility
Many investors may have had a roller-coaster ride recently. Fallout from the eurozone crisis has created the most turbulent period in world stock markets since the downturn began in 2008. However, amid all this gloom there is some good news. The simple truth is that volatility is a fact of investment life; you’re often better served staying in the markets over the long term than pulling out. Here’s why, and how, you can do it.
1. Remind yourself          why you invested
Most people invest in order to achieve a better return than  they’d receive from other forms of saving, such as bank deposits. While  it may be tempting to squirrel away cash in a bank, pulling out of the  market when it’s falling is one of the worst things you can do as you’ll  simply crystallise your losses.
If you’d stuck with the FTSE All-Share Index over the past 20 years, your portfolio would have increased by 361 per cent, or 7.94 per cent a year. However, if you’d pulled out and missed the best 20 days’ performance, you’d have gained only 60.8 per cent, or 2.4 per cent a year [1]. Remember, though, that past performance isn’t a guide to future performance.
2. Remember your own time horizons and goals
Many investors overreact to short-term market volatility, which  isn’t usually relevant to their long-term goals. Review your strategy  and remind yourself why you’re investing – is it for your young  children’s university fees or are you saving for retirement? These  objectives are unlikely to have changed, even if the market has taken a  tumble.
3. Don’t put all your          eggs in one basket
The key to long-term investment success is having a good balance  of investments – for example, diversify between different        types of funds, equities, property and cash. Piling all your money  into one asset class is high risk. Check where your funds are invested:  spread holdings over different sectors and geographical areas. Review  the balance of your assets: are you exposed to too much or too little  risk? For instance, if you previously had 50 per cent of your  investments in equity-based growth funds, it’s likely that market falls  will have reduced this share as a percentage of the whole. You should  check to see if this new asset allocation matches your risk profile.
4. Check your exposure to risk
The younger you are the greater exposure to equities you might  want to accept, as you have more time to make up any losses. However, if  the recent ups and downs have become too much for you, consider  reassessing your attitude to risk.
5. Drip-feed your investments
Drip-feeding money into investments at regular intervals allows  investors to smooth out risk through ‘pound-cost averaging’. This forces  you to invest in all conditions, thereby helping to avoid the poor  decisions that many people make when trying to second-guess the market.  When the market falls, your payment will buy more shares or units in a  fund so you’ll have a bigger holding when markets recover.
6. Take counter measures
Look at the type of investment funds you hold and make sure they  are best        placed to give you some protection when markets slump, but also to  benefit when they bounce back. Good-quality fixed interest funds are  likely to be relatively stable, whereas equity funds will be more  volatile, so you should look to hold a combination in the right mix for  you. You could perhaps consider absolute return funds, which aim to  produce a positive return in all conditions. However, not all have  produced the desired result amid the recent volatility and many charge  performance fees on top of the annual management charge.
7. Change funds if they’re consistently underperforming
If certain funds are repeatedly failing to deliver, it’s time to  assess whether they’re worth holding on to or not. Chopping and changing  funds may incur management fees though, so you could consider using  ‘funds of funds’, where the fund manager does this for you.
As property is a specialist sector it can be volatile in adverse market conditions, there could be delays in realising the investment. The value and income received from property investments can go down as well as up.
[1] Figures correct to 07/11/11. Source: Standard Life Investments using Thomson Reuters Datastream.
