If there’s one rule you must understand before investing, it’s this:
Higher potential reward usually comes with higher risk.
This idea is called the risk–reward relationship, and it applies to everything in the share market.
Let’s break it down clearly and simply.
What is Risk?
In investing, risk means the possibility of losing money.
It does NOT mean you will lose money.
It means:
- The value of your investment can go up or down.
- The future outcome is uncertain.
- Returns are not guaranteed.
When you buy shares on the
Australian Securities Exchange, you accept that prices can fluctuate daily.
What is Reward?
Reward is the potential return you may earn from investing.
This could come from:
- Capital growth (share price increase)
- Dividends (profit paid to shareholders)
The bigger the possible gain, the higher the potential reward.
Simple Example
Let’s compare two options:
Option A – Bank Savings Account
- Low risk
- Fixed interest
- Stable but small return
Option B – Shares
- Prices move daily
- Can rise strongly
- Can also fall
Shares offer higher potential reward — but also higher risk.
That’s the trade-off.
Why Do Higher Returns Require Higher Risk?
Because uncertainty creates opportunity.
If an investment were guaranteed to double your money, everyone would buy it instantly — and the opportunity would disappear.
Higher returns are available because investors are willing to accept uncertainty.
Types of Risk in the Share Market
Understanding risk helps you manage it.
1️⃣ Market Risk
The entire market falls due to economic conditions.
For example:
If the
S&P/ASX 200 drops sharply, most large companies may decline together.
2️⃣ Company Risk
Something specific happens to a company:
- Poor earnings
- Management scandal
- Failed product launch
This affects that company’s share price.
3️⃣ Economic Risk
Interest rates, inflation, recession, or global events can impact markets.
4️⃣ Liquidity Risk
Some small companies may be hard to sell quickly.
5️⃣ Emotional Risk
Fear and greed cause poor decisions.
Many losses happen because of emotional reactions — not poor investments.
Risk vs Reward in Real Numbers
Imagine:
You invest $1,000.
Low-Risk Scenario:
Annual return 4%
After 1 year = $1,040
Higher-Risk Scenario:
Possible return 15%
After 1 year = $1,150
But it could also drop to $850.
Higher reward comes with higher uncertainty.
Understanding Volatility
Volatility measures how fast prices move.
- High volatility = bigger price swings
- Low volatility = steadier movement
High volatility often means higher risk — but also higher opportunity.
Risk Tolerance – Know Yourself
Everyone has different risk tolerance.
Ask yourself:
- Can I stay calm if my investment drops 20%?
- Do I need steady income?
- Am I investing long-term?
- How much time can I commit?
Young investors with long time horizons can often handle more risk — because they have time to recover from downturns.
The Power of Diversification
One way to manage risk is diversification.
Instead of buying one company, you spread money across:
- Different industries
- Different company sizes
- ETFs
Diversification reduces company-specific risk.
That’s why many beginners start with index ETFs.
The Risk–Reward Ratio
Professional investors often calculate:
Risk–Reward Ratio = Potential Loss vs Potential Gain
Example:
Risk $100 to potentially gain $300
Risk–Reward Ratio = 1:3
This means potential reward is three times the potential risk.
This helps investors make logical decisions instead of emotional ones.
Common Beginner Mistakes
- Chasing high returns without understanding risk
- Investing all money in one stock
- Panic selling during downturns
- Ignoring long-term goals
Risk is not the enemy — ignorance is.
Is All Risk Bad?
No.
Without risk, there is no growth.
Australia’s strongest companies grew because investors accepted risk in early stages.
Smart investing is not about avoiding risk completely.
It’s about:
- Understanding it
- Managing it
- Being prepared for it
Risk Over Time
Short-term investing usually carries more uncertainty.
Long-term investing often reduces volatility impact.
Historically, over long periods, markets trend upward — but short-term fluctuations are normal.
Patience reduces risk impact.
Simple Visual Idea
Think of risk like waves in the ocean.
Short-term traders try to surf every wave.
Long-term investors focus on the direction of the tide.
Key Terms to Remember
Risk – Possibility of losing money
Reward – Potential return
Volatility – Speed of price movement
Diversification – Spreading investments
Risk tolerance – Comfort level with uncertainty
Risk–Reward ratio – Comparing potential gain to potential loss
Final Thought
Risk and reward are connected.
If you want higher returns, you must accept higher uncertainty.
The goal is not to eliminate risk.
The goal is to take calculated risk.
Learn first. Practise in a simulator.
Then invest with discipline — not emotion.