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By Jason Stipp| 9-15-2009 2:55 PM

Wake-Up Call on 'Sleep at Night' Investing

Playing it safe may feel good in the short term, but it can leave you short-changed in the longer run. Morningstar's Christine Benz offers a different way to think about your risk tolerance.

Jason Stipp: I'm Jason Stipp with Morningstar. A nice 50-percent-plus run off of March lows certainly helps to take the edge off. But I know that for myself and for a lot of people out there, we're still not quite back to that level that we were before the credit crisis. Which brings the question to mind of risk and how much risk can we tolerate in our portfolios?

Here to talk about some ways you can think of risk is Christine Benz. She is Morningstar's director of personal finance. Thanks for joining me again, Christine.

Christine Benz: Hi Jason, nice to be here.

Stipp: The credit crisis and what we saw a year ago when Lehman Brothers collapsed, we saw some extreme volatility, a lot of securities moving in the same direction at once. And I think that a lot of investors are wondering, after we have gotten through that, looking forward should we be thinking about risk differently? Are the riskier assets in our portfolio even riskier than we thought before? And how should we recalibrate our risk tolerance based on this last crazy year in the market?

Benz: It is a great question, Jason. And as some pundits have said, we seem to have these once-in-a-lifetime, catastrophic market events every couple of years over the past decade. So a lot of people who think about asset allocation, and think about how to structure portfolios, are in fact incorporating the possibility for some of these so called "fat tail" events to happen with a greater degree of frequency.

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