How do you keep client risk tolerance stable as markets gyrate?

How do you keep client risk tolerance stable as markets gyrate?
Counterintuitively, advisers can instill a sense of calm in clients and attract new clients to the firm by inviting a risk-focused conversation into the room.
NOV 23, 2022

As I’ve talked to thousands of financial advisers over the years, I’m convinced there must have been a class back in financial adviser school where they said, “There are two things you should never talk about with your clients — it’s not religion and politics — it’s risk and the short term.”

For many of us, the word risk is associated with a sense of danger, or perhaps more charitably, adventure. So that instinct to never talk about risk is reasonable. But the challenge is, your clients respond to risk in the short term.

Counterintuitively, we can instill a sense of calm in our clients, we can attract new clients to our firm, and we can drive the satisfaction and retention of our existing client base by inviting a risk-focused conversation into the room.

The reality is, clients intuitively understand there is risk in the markets. Refusing to talk about the perceived “monsters under the bed” never made the fear go away with our kids, and it doesn’t cause it to disappear with our clients either. We will have the greatest success keeping their stress low by shining the light on risk, not minimizing its impact.

And it turns out that having risk-focused conversations, based on real quantitative analysis of how wild markets might impact an investment portfolio, really drives better confidence and stability in how people tolerate risk.

Over the last several years, we’ve been asking our Check-in questions to measure market sentiment and plan confidence at the same time that we’ve been measuring the client’s risk tolerance. You would expect risk tolerance for a fixed group of clients to drop slightly each year as they get closer to retirement and needing to draw down their assets for living expenses. What we found was fascinating.

In 2022, market sentiment has plunged by 128%. (Methodology: we assign a 1 to every positive answer and a -1 to every negative answer. The mean answer was +0.601 last year and is -0.167 this year.) But during the very same time frame with the very same clients, the Risk Number of the average client dropped by an imperceptible 2% — and that’s without any adjustments for age, time horizon and getting closer to retirement.

Further, we’ve proven with the data that clients whose advisers are actively driving these risk conversations are far less anxious than the population of clients seeking out an adviser. We did that by comparing the anxious clients in an adviser’s existing book of business versus the average prospect coming in on that same adviser’s website as a prospective client. Prospective clients were three times as likely to be anxious as an adviser’s existing clients — perhaps no huge surprise as there is a reason those investors were looking for a new adviser, but proof that risk-first conversations work to reduce that anxiety and stabilize client behavior.

Bottom line: Helping clients truly understand risk is the key to driving real growth in a wealth management firm. It keeps clients invested and assets compounding; it attracts new clients who need the benefit of advice; and it helps existing clients stay satisfied and retained.

Aaron Klein is CEO at Riskalyze, the industry’s risk-centric growth platform.

Having a certification earns you respect, Mary Beth Franklin says

Latest News

Advisor moves: Sanctuary Wealth gains $1.2B breakaways, Raymond James scores a double
Advisor moves: Sanctuary Wealth gains $1.2B breakaways, Raymond James scores a double

Wells Fargo, Commonwealth, UBS are the firms losing advisor teams.

JPMorgan must face claims over son’s fleecing of elderly mom
JPMorgan must face claims over son’s fleecing of elderly mom

Firms are facing increasing scrutiny over whether they can be held responsible for losses by clients whose ability to understand their investments has been compromised.

Cresset, Monticello to combine in strategic partnership with almost $200B in assets
Cresset, Monticello to combine in strategic partnership with almost $200B in assets

Decision deepens the two firms’ decade-long relationship

FINRA investigating B-D arm of Linqto, bankrupt pre-IPO trading platform
FINRA investigating B-D arm of Linqto, bankrupt pre-IPO trading platform

Linqto Inc. was one of the first tech platforms to promise access to small investors into the high-risk, high-reward world of private investments.

Citigroup continues strategic investment banking talent raid on JPMorgan
Citigroup continues strategic investment banking talent raid on JPMorgan

Since Vis Raghavan took over the reins last year, several have jumped ship.

SPONSORED Delivering family office services critical to advisor success

Stan Gregor, Chairman & CEO of Summit Financial Holdings, explores how RIAs can meet growing demand for family office-style services among mass affluent clients through tax-first planning, technology, and collaboration—positioning firms for long-term success

SPONSORED Passing on more than wealth: why purpose should be part of every estate plan

Chris Vizzi, Co-Founder & Partner of South Coast Investment Advisors, LLC, shares how 2025 estate tax changes—$13.99M per person—offer more than tax savings. Learn how to pass on purpose, values, and vision to unite generations and give wealth lasting meaning