Honestly, the standard investment risk questionnaire might be the most soporific thing ever devised. "On a scale of one to five, how would you feel if your portfolio lost 10%?"
Who knows? Ask me on a Tuesday after a good night's sleep and I haven’t spent an hour in traffic. Ask me on a Friday evening when the news is full of recession talk and I'm trying to run away. Yet for decades, the financial services industry has used these static, multiple-choice snoozefests to determine how to invest trillions of dollars.
We have the technology to
