Profit From Known Risky Events With One Proven Strategy
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| Profit From Known Risky Events With One Proven Strategy | | Financial markets were originally born to manage risk.
Think about it. You deposit money in a bank because it's held in a vault, rather than under your mattress or some other location in your home. You use insurance to offset the risk of the loss of an asset—your car, your home, even your source of income should you die unexpectedly during your working years.
Even the first stock shares were issued to break up the risk of ownership in a company—a form of risk management for owners and speculators looking for a stake that wouldn't tie up all their capital.
Today, we hardly think about these risks. But there are other ones that we do see. We know when a big snowstorm is hitting in the winter that some places will be frozen in for a few days. And in the summer, during hurricane season in North America, there's a good chance a few storms will hit.
These events carry with them elevated risks in some sectors—and elevated rewards. Today's fast-moving markets tend to price that information in quickly, but you can still make some short-term profits following that news. And with technology, we can detect these problems earlier than before and prepare better.
Before a hurricane, for example, you can expect people in the potentially affected area to go out and buy certain foodstuffs, top up on their gas, and buy extra lumber and other supplies to protect their property. After a hurricane, when the damage has been assessed, price moves in other types of companies will show just how much the market correctly priced in the risk of a storm.
By following a strategy that plays to this trend, investors have a pre-set toolkit for making a profit during these situations whenever they occur.
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