Premium content from Motley Fool Share Advisor UK
Investors following the Fire style are accepting higher risk with the goal of attaining higher returns over time. So this approach requires a higher risk tolerance, and the willingness to accept significant volatility in share prices. In October 2019, we also expanded the range of our Fire shares to also include potential recommendations from the US stock market, which tends to include a better variety of âgrowthâ stocks.
We suggest that investors that primarily buy Fire shares should be particularly mindful of diversification in their portfolios. With sufficient diversification investors should still be able benefit from any upside, while limiting the damage to their portfolio when situations donât turn out as we hoped.
We donât consider Fire investing to be gambling or a get-rich-quick scheme, though. We aim to be long-term owners of these businesses and reap the rewards from their success. Our investing time horizon for these shares is measured in years and decades, not weeks and months.
“Disappointing results from recent products have created a dark cloud that investors should be able to weather.”
Ian Pierce, Share Advisor
October’s Fire recommendation:
Redacted
Want The Full Recommendation? Enter Your Email Address!
I would like to receive emails from you about product information and offers from The Fool and its business partners. Each of these emails will provide a link to unsubscribe from future emails. More information about how The Fool collects, stores, and handles personal data is available in its Privacy Statement.
The post Just released: October’s higher-risk, high-reward stock recommendation [PREMIUM PICKS] appeared first on The Motley Fool UK.
More reading
2 household names quietly thrashing the FTSE 100
A FTSE 250 share and an ETF I’d buy for a second income
3 reasons why I’m avoiding Rolls-Royce shares like the plague!
After crashing another 15% today is this FTSE blue-chip now the best share to buy today?
Here’s what Warren Buffett says is ‘the best way to minimise risk’ (it’s not buying the S&P 500)