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No matter how sophisticated your understanding of economics, or the ins-and-outs of a particular investment market, predicting the financial future is still like playing the lottery. To emphasize this we have included a tool which simulates the random aspect of the behavior of financial and other markets.
When you click the Simulate Market Variability button
the behavior of the Secondary Account changes. Its associated interest
rate is no longer held constant over time. The first year of the period
starts, as before with an interest rate set using the interest
rate control, but for each succeeding year the rate varies by a small
amount from that used
in the previous year. The size and direction of the change is 'randomly'
determined, with small changes being more likely than large ones. (Overall
the changes follow a normal distribution). You will see that over
long
periods
(try 100
years) the significance
of the random, or impossible-to-predict quality of markets
is quite striking.
Remember: This version of the future, as far as we know,
is as valid a representation of what will happen as the default constant-rate
scenario.
Here is an example of an investment of $100,000 - with an initial interest
rate of 5%. The chart on the left shows its behavior if the rate remains
at 5%, while the one on the right shows the effect of a small
random increment and decrement made each year to the interest rate.


To generate another simulation, with new random parameters, click the New
Simulation button:![]()