How Investors Perceive Financial Safety


October 20, 2025

What makes an investment truly safe? Is it a guaranteed return, or the confidence that your money is working behind something tangible and transparent? These questions are not only financial but also psychological. To explore how investors themselves define safety and stability, Modena Capital conducted a focused survey: the Modena Investment Compass.

How People Actually Think About Financial Safety

A recent Modena Investment Compass survey explored how investors perceive financial safety, risk, and stability in their decision-making. The findings were remarkably consistent: regardless of country or experience, most investors associate safety not with guaranteed returns, but with clarity, diversification, and control.

In fact, 68% of respondents said they feel safest when their funds are spread across several trusted platforms. Only 11% defined safety as having a “guaranteed” or “insured” return. This marks a clear shift in investor psychology—from seeking absolute guarantees to seeking transparency and accountability. Investors increasingly want to understand where their money is, what protects it, and how it grows.

The Psychology Behind Financial Confidence

When asked how they would react if their investments dropped by 5%, 82% of respondents said they would remain calm or even see it as a buying opportunity. That level of composure indicates a mature investor base—people who understand that short-term volatility is part of long-term growth.

Behavioral finance research has long confirmed that a sense of safety does not come from the absence of risk, but from the ability to understand and manage it.

“Financial peace of mind doesn’t come from eliminating risk, but from making it predictable and controllable.”

Why Moderate Risk Is the New Normal

Historically, investors were divided into two camps—conservative savers and aggressive risk-takers. Today, most sit somewhere in between. According to the survey, 70% describe themselves as moderate-risk investors: they are willing to take some risk in pursuit of meaningful returns, but within a structured and transparent framework.

This balance reflects broader economic trends. After years of market uncertainty, people no longer want to hide their money, but neither do they wish to chase volatility. They seek stability with purpose—returns that make sense and risks they can measure.

Safety Means Different Things to Different People

When asked, “How do you usually achieve a sense of financial safety?” respondents gave diverse answers:

Source of safety% of respondents
Diversifying across multiple platforms68%
Having quick access to cash when needed15%
Investing in guaranteed or insured products11%
Using asset-backed or collateralized products6%

This shows that financial safety is a deeply personal concept. For some, it means liquidity and flexibility; for others, it means tangible collateral or institutional trust. There is no universal formula—only individual comfort zones.

The Three Investor Profiles Emerging from the Survey

Based on the data, respondents can be grouped into three broad profiles:

Investor TypeDescriptionShare
Steady GrowersPrioritize stability and capital protection25%
Balanced PlannersSeek balance between risk and return55%
Growth SeekersFocus on aggressive growth and opportunity20%

These are not just investment categories—they reflect life attitudes. Steady Growers value peace of mind and predictability. Balanced Planners prefer clarity and flexibility. Growth Seekers thrive in dynamic, opportunity-driven environments.

What This Means for the Market

The data paints an encouraging picture: investors are becoming more conscious, analytical, and self-aware. Return alone is no longer the dominant motivator. Trust, transparency, and responsible risk management now define the modern investment mindset.

This evolution signals a maturing investor community—one that welcomes financial products designed not only for performance, but for peace of mind.

In Conclusion

The question, “How safe do I feel about my money?” is more than a financial one—it is a reflection of personal psychology and control. Our approach to risk mirrors how we approach uncertainty in life.

If this survey reveals anything, it is that investing is no longer just about growing wealth—it is about designing calm, intentional growth.

Data in this article is based on the Modena Capital “Investment Compass” survey conducted in October 2025, with 72 active investor respondents across European markets. This content is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice or an offer to buy or sell financial products.