This is one of the most popular topics among
the newcomers who are looking for generating profit in the financial
markets. Investopedia has a good article illustrating the difference
between investing and trading (Read more here). This article is not going to repeat
what has been written in Investopedia, but will provide better interpretation. Part
I and II of this series will explain more about this while the third method,
which is the Hybrid mode is in Part III.
Whether you choose investing or trading, both
of them share the same principle – Risk and Return. The most appropriate
equation to represent this relationship is the expected return equation.
E(R) = (p)(RW) + (1-p)(RL)
Where,
• p = Chances of
positive return
• RW = Positive return
• 1 – p = Chances of negative return
• RL = Negative
return
The first part of the equation (p)(RW)
represents the Return while the latter part of the equation (1-p)(RL)
represents the Risk. Let’s look at one simple example.
There is an opportunity that you can make 10%
return with 70% chance of achieving it, but the penalty is 10% loss, do you
think it is worth to invest or trade? Let’s do the math.
10% = RW
70% = p
-10% = RL
30% = 1 – p
E(R) = (70%)(10%) + (30%)(-10%) = 4%
What does this mean?
The expected return is 4%. It means, if
anyone tried to sell a financial product to you with 10% return, always ask for
the chances of profit and the risk. Then use the expected return equation
to calculate the expected return. If the expected return is 4%, which is
almost same as putting money in fixed deposit account (Malaysian context), do
you think it is worth to invest or trade?
Off course it is easy to calculate the
expected return, but verifying the appropriate numbers to put into the equation
is not straight forward. To keep the article short, we will discuss that
in part II.
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