Ask ten people what “risk” means and most will point to market falls. Red numbers. Volatility. Nerves.
But that’s not actually what risk is — and the confusion is costing investors more than they realise.
In financial planning, risk is the possibility that your money won’t do what you need it to do. It’s the chance that a plan fails. Market ups and downs are only one small part of that story.
Yet the industry often treats the two as if they are the same thing.
How investors end up with a label
At some stage, most people are asked to complete a risk questionnaire. A series of scenarios, a few multiple-choice answers, and out comes a description: cautious, balanced, adventurous.
It feels precise. Something has been “measured”.
In reality, these tools are mostly capturing how comfortable someone thinks they might be with market movement. They are measuring anticipated emotional reaction, not the structural strength of a financial plan.
That distinction matters. A great deal.
Feeling uneasy during market turbulence doesn’t automatically mean a strategy is flawed. Feeling calm doesn’t mean it will succeed.
Where the real danger sits
A portfolio can move around a lot and still be perfectly on track to fund a long retirement, support family goals or preserve purchasing power. Equally, a portfolio that barely fluctuates may quietly fall behind inflation, tax and spending needs.
The true threat for many households is not that markets fall from time to time. It is that returns are too low for too long. That capital erodes slowly. That income needs outpace growth. That later life becomes financially constrained.
Those risks rarely show up in a questionnaire.
They show up years down the line, when choices become limited.
Risk changes with circumstances
People don’t experience money decisions in a vacuum. A market fall feels very different to someone with secure income and decades ahead than it does to someone about to retire or drawing an income.
Health, family responsibilities, job security, time horizon and future plans all influence how much strain a financial plan can absorb. None of those fit neatly into a single personality score.
Risk is situational. It evolves as life evolves.
Reducing it to a static label gives a false sense of certainty.
When process replaces judgement
Forms, scores and documented processes have become central in modern advice. They provide structure and consistency, which can be helpful. But paperwork is not the same as protection.
A completed questionnaire does not guarantee a suitable strategy. It shows that a step was followed. That’s different.
Good advice goes further. It asks whether the plan can cope with setbacks: market shocks, inflation surprises, early retirement, changes in spending or unexpected events. Cashflow modelling and scenario testing are powerful precisely because they focus on consequences, not feelings.
They examine whether the destination is still reachable if the journey gets bumpy.
A better question to ask
Instead of “How much volatility are you comfortable with?”, the more useful question is:
“What needs to happen for this plan to work — and what happens if it doesn’t?”
That shifts the focus from short-term movements to long-term outcomes. From emotion to resilience. From labels to real-world impact.
Markets will always move. That’s not avoidable. What matters is whether a financial strategy is robust enough to withstand those movements without derailing the life it is meant to support.
That’s what risk really means.
Benefit from comprehensive, integrated, and objective advice.
Let’s discuss your specific needs and how I can help you meet your objectives
Let’s start the conversation
Online enquiry form
Related posts
Published On: January 16, 2026|6.1 min read|The Retirement Paradox: Why Britain’s Savers Are Too Nervous to Spend
Britain’s pension problem is normally described as a numbers problem: too little saved, too late. That is real. But there is another problem sitting alongside it — more psychological, and arguably more corrosive: even when people have saved enough, they no longer feel entitled to use it.
Read more
Published On: December 11, 2025|4.3 min read|Building Shock-Resistant Portfolios in an Era of Geopolitical Risk, Sanctions, and Inflation
Global uncertainty has become the norm. Trade tensions, inflationary pressure, sanctions, and shifting geopolitical interests now influence markets in ways not seen for decades. For internationally mobile professionals and high-net-worth families, the question is no longer if disruption will occur but how prepared your portfolio is when it happens.
Read more
Published On: December 9, 2025|5.3 min read|Offshore banking: Is it actually useful or is it just marketing
For expats and internationally mobile professionals, offshore banking can be extremely practical. It can also be oversold.
Read more








