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Investor Definition: What Is An Investor?

An investor is defined as any person or entity that commits capital with the expectation of receiving financial returns. Investors utilize various investment vehicles like stocks, bonds, real estate, and commodities to grow their money for long-term goals like retirement. Investors perform analysis to minimize risk and maximize returns, taking strategic positions for years or decades rather than short-term trades. They can be distinguished from traders by their long-term orientation and can adopt either passive or active investment strategies.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
110 views

Investor Definition: What Is An Investor?

An investor is defined as any person or entity that commits capital with the expectation of receiving financial returns. Investors utilize various investment vehicles like stocks, bonds, real estate, and commodities to grow their money for long-term goals like retirement. Investors perform analysis to minimize risk and maximize returns, taking strategic positions for years or decades rather than short-term trades. They can be distinguished from traders by their long-term orientation and can adopt either passive or active investment strategies.

Uploaded by

Christine David
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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9/6/2019 Investor Definition

TRADING SKILLS & ESSENTIALS TRADING BASIC EDUCATION

Investor Definition
REVIEWED BY JAMES CHEN | Updated Apr 30, 2019

What Is an Investor?
An investor is any person or other entity (such as a firm or mutual fund) who commits capital
with the expectation of receiving financial returns. Investors utilize investments in order to grow
their money and/or provide an income during retirement, such as with an annuity.

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A wide variety of investment vehicles exist including (but not limited to) stocks, bonds,
commodities, mutual funds, exchange-traded funds (ETFs), options, futures, foreign exchange,
gold, silver, retirement plans and real estate. Investors typically perform technical and/or
fundamental analysis to determine favorable investment opportunities, and generally prefer to
minimize risk while maximizing returns.

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An investor typically is made distinct from a trader. An investor puts capital to use for long-term
gain, while a trader seeks to generate short-term profits by buying and selling securities over
and over again.

Investors typically generate returns by deploying capital as either equity or debt investments.
Equity investments entail ownership stakes in the form of company stock that may pay
dividends in addition to capital gains. Debt investments may be as loans extended to other
individuals or firms, or in the form of purchasing bonds issued by governments or corporations
which pay interest in the form of coupons.

How Investors Work


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How Investors Work

Investors are not a uniform bunch. They have varying risk tolerances, capital, styles, preferences
and time frames. For instance, some investors may prefer very low-risk investments that will
lead to conservative gains, such as certificates of deposits and certain bond products. Other
investors, however, are more inclined to take on additional risk in an attempt to make a larger
profit. These investors might invest in currencies, emerging markets or stocks.

A distinction can be made between the terms "investor" and "trader" in that investors typically
hold positions for years to decades (also called a "position trader" or "buy and hold investor")
while traders generally hold positions for shorter periods. Scalp traders, for example, hold
positions for as little as a few seconds. Swing traders, on the other hand, seek positions that are
held from several days to several weeks.

Institutional investors are organizations such as financial firms or mutual funds that invest in
stocks and other financial instruments and build sizable portfolios. Often, they are able to
accumulate and pool money from several smaller investors (individuals and/or firms) in order to
take larger investments. Because of this, institutional investors often have far greater market
power and influence than individual retail investors.

KEY TAKEAWAYS
Investors can be distinguished from traders in that investors take long-term strategic
positions in companies or projects.
Investors build portfolios either with an active orientation that tries to beat the
benchmark index, or a passive strategy that attempts to track the index.
Investors may also be oriented toward either growth or value stock picking strategies.

Passive and Active Investors


Investors may also adopt various market strategies. Passive investors tend to buy and hold
various market indexes, and may optimize their allocation weights to certain asset classes
based on rules such as Modern Portfolio Theory's (MPT) mean-variance optimization. Others
may be stock pickers who invest based on fundamental analysis of corporate financial
statements and financial ratios.

One example of this would be the "value" investors who seek to purchase stocks with low share
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9/6/2019 Investor Definition

prices relative to their book value. Others may seek to invest long-term in "growth" stocks that

may be losing money at the moment but are growing rapidly and hold promise for the future,

Passive (indexed) investing is becoming increasingly popular, where it is expected to overtake


active investment strategies as the dominant stock market logic by the year 2020. The growth of
low-cost target-date mutual funds, ETFs and robo-advisors are responsible for this surge in
popularity.

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Related Terms
Investing Definition
Investing is the act of allocating funds to an asset or committing capital to an endeavor with the
expectation of generating an income or profit. more
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9/6/2019 Investor Definition

Portfolio Investment Definition


A portfolio investment is a passive investment of assets in a portfolio, made with the expectation of
seeing a return. more

Active Trading Definition


Active trading is the buying and selling of securities or other instruments with the intention of only
holding the position for a short period of time. more

Risk Parity Definition


Risk parity is a portfolio allocation strategy using risk to determine allocations across various
components of an investment portfolio. more

How a Buy-and-Hold Strategy Works


Buy and hold is a passive investment strategy in which an investor buys stocks and holds them for a long
period regardless of fluctuations in the market. more

Mutual Fund Definition


A mutual fund is defined as a type of investment vehicle consisting of a portfolio of stocks, bonds or other
securities, which is overseen by a professional money manager. Long a favored choice for retail investors,
mutual funds have both advantages and disadvantages compared to other asset classes. more

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