Study these terms before or after solving the puzzle. Each definition includes a real-world US example.
RISK
Risk in investing refers to the possibility that an investment will lose value or underperform expectations. Different investments carry different types of risk: market risk (overall market declines), company risk (a specific company fails), inflation risk (returns don't keep up with rising prices), and liquidity risk (can't sell quickly). Understanding and accepting appropriate risk is fundamental to building long-term wealth.
In 2022, investors who held only individual tech stocks (like Meta or Netflix) saw losses of 60–70%. Investors in diversified S&P 500 index funds lost about 18% — painful, but far less severe. Investors in a balanced portfolio of stocks and bonds lost even less. Risk management through diversification dramatically reduces the severity of any single bad outcome.
TOLERANCE
Risk tolerance is the degree of investment volatility and potential loss an investor is willing to accept in pursuit of higher returns. It is influenced by time horizon (how long before you need the money), financial situation (can you afford a loss?), and psychological comfort with fluctuations. Investing beyond your true risk tolerance often leads to panic selling during market downturns — turning temporary paper losses into permanent realized losses.
During the COVID-19 crash of March 2020, the S&P 500 dropped 34% in 33 days. Investors with high risk tolerance held (or bought more) and recovered fully within 5 months. Investors who overestimated their risk tolerance panicked and sold at the bottom — locking in 34% losses and missing the recovery. Knowing your true tolerance before a crash is invaluable.
COMPOUND
Compound growth is the process where investment returns generate additional returns — earning "interest on interest." It is the most powerful force in long-term wealth building. The key to compound growth is time: the earlier you invest, the more decades your money has to multiply. Warren Buffett earned approximately 97% of his fortune after age 65 — a testament to the power of compounding over 60+ years of investing.
$5,000 invested at age 25 at 10%/year annual return grows to approximately $226,000 by age 65 — a 45x return. The same $5,000 invested at age 45 grows to only $33,600 by age 65 — a 6.7x return. The 20-year head start is worth $192,400, without adding a single additional dollar. This is why starting early is the single most important investing decision.
PORTFOLIO
A portfolio is the complete collection of investments held by an individual or institution — including stocks, bonds, ETFs, mutual funds, real estate, cash, and other assets. Building a well-designed portfolio requires balancing return potential against risk through diversification. Your portfolio allocation should reflect your age, goals, time horizon, and risk tolerance. Regular review and rebalancing keeps the portfolio aligned with your targets.
A classic beginner portfolio recommended by many financial advisors: 60% US total stock market index fund + 20% international stock index fund + 20% bond index fund. This "three-fund portfolio" provides exposure to thousands of securities across the globe, extremely low costs (under 0.10% total), and appropriate diversification — all in three simple ETF or mutual fund purchases.
DIVIDEND
A dividend is a cash payment made by a company to its shareholders from profits, typically quarterly. Dividend investing can generate passive income while also benefiting from share price appreciation. Reinvesting dividends (DRIP programs) compounds returns dramatically over time. "Dividend aristocrats" are S&P 500 companies that have raised dividends for 25+ consecutive years — demonstrating financial stability and shareholder commitment.
A beginning investor who puts $10,000 in the Vanguard High Dividend Yield ETF (VYM) with a 3% annual dividend yield receives $300/year in dividends. Reinvesting those dividends over 30 years at 8% total return turns $10,000 into approximately $100,600. The dividend reinvestment contributes significantly to this outcome versus spending the dividends.
BROKERAGE
A brokerage account is an investment account held at a financial institution that allows you to buy and sell stocks, bonds, ETFs, and mutual funds. Unlike retirement accounts (IRA, 401k), brokerage accounts have no contribution limits and funds can be withdrawn anytime without penalty — but investment gains are taxable in the year realized. Major online brokerages (Fidelity, Schwab, Vanguard) eliminated trading commissions in 2019.
Opening a Fidelity brokerage account takes about 10 minutes online with no minimum balance requirement. You can immediately buy a single share of a low-cost S&P 500 ETF (like FSKAX) or even fractional shares for as little as $1. Most beginner investors start by maxing out their 401k and IRA first, then use a taxable brokerage account for additional investing.
DIVERSIFY
Diversification is the practice of spreading investments across different asset types, sectors, and geographies to reduce risk without necessarily sacrificing returns. The core insight: different assets often move in opposite directions, so losses in one area are offset by gains in another. Diversification is often called "the only free lunch in investing" because it reduces risk without reducing expected returns.
An investor with 100% in technology stocks lost about 33% in 2022 as the Nasdaq crashed. An investor split equally between US stocks, international stocks, and bonds lost about 15%. An investor with real estate holdings lost even less. True diversification — across asset classes, not just sectors — meaningfully cushions market downturns.
DOLLAR
Dollar-cost averaging (DCA) is an investment strategy of investing a fixed dollar amount at regular intervals — such as $500/month — regardless of market conditions. When prices are high, you buy fewer shares; when prices are low, you buy more. Over time, this averages your cost per share and removes the psychological pressure of trying to time the market perfectly. It's the strategy behind automatic 401k contributions.
An investor who puts $500/month into an S&P 500 index fund rain or shine — including during COVID-19 crashes, 2022 bear markets, and every correction — automatically buys more shares when prices are lowest. This discipline, applied for 30 years at historical returns, produces far better results than most attempts at market timing by professionals.
HORIZON
Your investment time horizon is the length of time you plan to hold your investments before needing the money. It is one of the most critical factors in determining appropriate asset allocation. Long horizons (20+ years) allow for more aggressive portfolios with higher stock allocations, since there's time to recover from market downturns. Short horizons (under 5 years) demand more conservative allocations to protect against volatility near the withdrawal date.
A 25-year-old saving for retirement at 65 has a 40-year time horizon — enough to ride out multiple market cycles. Vanguard and Fidelity target-date funds automatically adjust: a 2065 fund today holds ~90% stocks; a 2025 fund (for someone retiring soon) holds ~50% stocks and 50% bonds. The fund automatically becomes more conservative as the target date approaches.
INDEX
An index fund is a type of investment fund designed to replicate the performance of a specific market index, like the S&P 500. Rather than hiring analysts to pick stocks, index funds passively hold all the securities in the index. This results in extremely low costs (often 0.03–0.10% annually vs 1%+ for active funds) and broad diversification. Index funds are the investment recommended by Warren Buffett for most individual investors.
The Vanguard Total Stock Market Index Fund (VTSAX) holds over 3,500 US stocks — from Apple and Microsoft to tiny companies in every sector. One purchase gives exposure to virtually the entire US stock market for 0.04%/year in fees. Over 20 years, this fund has outperformed approximately 85–90% of actively managed US stock funds — at a fraction of the cost.