Stocks

Stocks

What are stocks

Stocks represent ownership in a company. When you buy a stock, you own a small part of that business and participate in its growth and performance. The value of stocks can change over time depending on company results, market conditions, and broader economic factors.

In our approach, we explain the difference between direct stocks and ETFs, but the main equity allocation is generally built through diversified ETFs. This helps keep the strategy simple, transparent, and better diversified while still giving exposure to long-term market growth.
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Direct stocks vs ETFs

Direct stocks give exposure to one specific company, while ETFs provide exposure to many companies within a single instrument.
Main difference:
  • Stocks — ownership in one company
  • ETFs — diversified exposure across many companies
  • Stocks — higher company-specific risk
  • ETFs — broader diversification and simpler allocation
In our strategy, ETFs are generally the main tool for equity exposure, while direct stocks are explained as a separate instrument and used more selectively.

Why stocks matter for growth

Stocks are important because they can contribute to long-term capital growth.
Examples of well-known companies often used only as illustrations:
  • Apple
  • Microsoft
  • Nestlé
These examples are not recommendations. They simply show the kind of large public companies that stocks may represent within the broader equity market.

Volatility risks

Stocks can be volatile, especially over shorter periods of time.
Main risks:
  • Company-specific risk — one business can underperform
  • Market volatility — prices can rise and fall significantly
  • Sector risk — certain industries may weaken at times
Because of this volatility, direct stocks are generally less diversified than ETFs and require a more careful role within the overall portfolio.
Stocks

How stocks fit into our strategy

In our approach, stocks are part of the equity discussion, but the main structure is generally built through diversified ETFs.
This allows us to keep equity exposure broad and balanced rather than concentrating too much risk in individual companies.
01

Conservative Profile

little or no direct stock exposure, with the main focus on stability.
02

Balanced Profile

equity exposure is mainly achieved through diversified ETFs.
03

Growth Profile

a stronger focus on equity growth, still primarily through diversified instruments.
This means stocks remain important for growth, but in our model they are understood within a broader, diversified strategy rather than as the foundation of the portfolio on their own.

Frequently Asked Questions

  • 1. What is the difference between a stock and an ETF?
    A stock gives exposure to one company, while an ETF gives exposure to many companies within one instrument.
  • 2. Why are stocks important for growth?
    Stocks can contribute to long-term capital growth because they participate in the performance of businesses over time.
  • 3. Do you recommend specific companies such as Apple or Microsoft?
    No. Examples such as Apple, Microsoft, or Nestlé are used only as illustrations of well-known public companies, not as recommendations.
  • 4. Are stocks volatile?
    Yes. Stocks can be volatile, especially in the short term, which is why diversification remains important.
  • 5. Why does the strategy rely more on ETFs than direct stocks?
    ETFs usually provide broader diversification and a simpler structure, which makes them more suitable as the main equity tool in a long-term strategy.

Build a clear equity allocation

We help structure equity exposure in a way that supports long-term growth while keeping the overall portfolio balanced and diversified.