After 2008 many people swore off stocks. “Too Risky!” they say and then tell you about their hot new investment in a multi-level marketing scheme or their Uncle’s new franchise opportunity. Isn’t it funny how whatever assets you don’t own you always think are “too risky” when someone else owns them? I’m as guilty as the next guy on this. For instance, I don’t touch junk bonds and emerging market debt. It’s too risky. ;) But I think I can make a better case for this position than people who don’t own any stocks for the same reason.

I own stocks and I admit it. I feel comfortable with stocks in my portfolio because they represent an ownership stake in the productive capacity of my country. Every time someone buys a Coca Cola, a computer or any other product they hand me money through the profits. When I’m awake they are handing me money. When I’m asleep they are handing me money. They are handing me this money 24 hours a day and seven days a week across the planet as they make their purchases.

Stocks have risks. Sometimes these risks show up in big price declines. But sometimes these risks cause the prices to climb far higher and faster than any other asset you can own. Over time, stock dividends reinvested can grow capital by large amounts through compounding. This makes it different than assets like gold which cannot grow on its own as it pays no dividends.

While market risks can impact a company’s stock over a period of time, I also realize that most companies are resilient and can adapt to changing economic conditions and survive. Not all of them can do this, but most do. This is why I own a broadly based stock index fund. Such a fund may own over 5,000 individual company stocks. This means any one of company going bankrupt has an insignificant impact on the entire portfolio. Not only this, but stock index funds are cheap. Every penny an investor saves in management fees is another penny in their pocket each year to compound and grow.

I know the markets have proven to be efficient over time. This means it’s almost impossible to outperform the market averages as everyone else on the planet receives the same information you do almost instantly. I recognize that sometimes the markets are not 100% efficient all the time. But I also recognize that it’s close enough that debating the point is academic because rebalancing between assets eliminates these risks.

I admit that all the brokerage houses receive news of major events within seconds and have computers and people that will trade positions just as fast in reaction to it. Therefore, I don’t try to compete with these people by out trading them because someone like me is always the last to know. Instead, I just hold on to my boring index fund that owns everything and profit from the thrashing the professional and amateur traders are doing underneath. Over time, my index fund will beat in excess of 95% of all of them.

The markets are random. The price movements are not predictable day-to-day or even each year so I balance my stock ownership with assets like bonds, gold and cash. I don’t own just stocks because owning 100% in stocks is extremely risky and not guaranteed to bring any more success than a diversified portfolio. I know there have been protracted decade-plus stretches where stocks have performed poorly in real terms (such as the 1970s and 2000s). Therefore, I reject the idea that stocks are the only asset any investor needs. Instead, I diversify just in case the next decade of under-performance happens to be during a period of time when it could hurt me.

I understand that portfolios which do not have any stock exposure face the risk that they will not be able to grow faster than inflation over time. So I accept that stocks have risks of loss in order to ensure I have the chance to take advantage of gains when they present themselves to grow my money. Although assets like gold and bonds by themselves are useful to diversify against certain market risks, I know they may not be enough to beat inflation and grow the portfolio alone. That’s why I own stocks.

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