Why should I choose AnalystNotes?
Simply put: AnalystNotes offers the best value and the best product available to help you pass your exams.
Basic Question 1 of 4
A long investment time horizon is typically associated with ______.
B. investments with high liquidity
C. deferral of capital gains
A. low-risk investments
B. investments with high liquidity
C. deferral of capital gains
User Contributed Comments 8
User | Comment |
---|---|
jallado0 | why not A? |
Shelton | HR (high risk) |
yly14 | remember risk tolerance and time horizon are the two parameters for portfolio investing, one is preferably independent of the other. |
bobert | If you have a longer time horizon you also have a longer time to reaccumulate funds in the event you have a loss, low-risk has lower returns due to the reduced risk and are better for shorter time horizons when an investor is not capable of going back to work for instance. |
Khadria | B is a better choice than A |
StanleyMo | with longer time you can tolerate with the higher risk, guess this is talking about share market. |
tim2 | If you have a short time horizon, eg. you need the money next month to pay for a house you'd probably go for low risk such as leaving it in the bank. If you are leaving it 40 years you might go high risk eg. emerging markets etc |
gulfa99 | long risk can also apply to sovereign or corporate bonds. Say if you have no liquidity need for 10 years, you can invest your funds in xxx bonds paying 10% semiannually. The price of the bonds is affected by interest rate movement, if Interest rates move higher then the price of long term bond will drop and this will result in a loss if you have a liquidity need. where as short term investments are based on your liquidity needs..say 1, 3 or 6 months t-bills |
I passed! I did not get a chance to tell you before the exam - but your site was excellent. I will definitely take it next year for Level II.
Tamara Schultz
Learning Outcome Statements
describe the investment constraints of liquidity, time horizon, tax concerns, legal and regulatory factors, and unique circumstances and their implications for the choice of portfolio assets
CFA® 2024 Level I Curriculum, Volume 6, Module 4.