10
profit of £10 over the second. He would thus
he £30 out of pocket over the joint transac
tions, and his capital distribution would have
failed in its object. Whereas, if he had
invested £500 in each stock, then the loss on
the first stock would have been counter
balanced by the profit on the second, and his
capital distribution would have proved its
practical utility.
Of course, the point might be raised that
supposing the respective movements of the
two stocks had been exactly reversed, and the
£800 investment had risen and the £200
investment had fallen, in such a case the very
irregularity of the distribution would have
contributed to an increase of profit. But
this result of an unsound investment policy
in no way disproves the fact that unsound
investment policies invariably result in a final
catastrophe. Unequal investment of this
nature, where the result is left to chance, is
nothing more than speculation. In fact, a pur
chase of securities as in the illustration given
above is not an investment at all ; as far as
£600 of it is concerned, it is a speculative risk
against which no provision has been made.
The main object of sound investment is to
safeguard capital against loss, and this object
can only be attained by a refusal to jeopardise