Thankfully there’s now an easy, low fee, way to maximize your return/risk ratio: Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs).
As I’m sure you know, risk and rewards are correlated in financial markets. Country and corporate bonds that are more risky are less expensive, and so have to provide higher yields to gain investors.
The same is true for stocks, in the sense that you’ll obviously make more money if you can invest in a winner early when their stock price is low. But of course, it’s low because there’s a chance it will fail, wiping your investment.
This is where ETFs come in. Before you had two options: choose individual stocks and risk choosing wrong, or pay a financial consultant outrageous fees to do it for you.
ETFs allows you to track the market, without needing to worry about individual stocks. They also (usually) charge very low fees.
If you are interested in US equities, VOO, which tracks the S&P 500, has a gross expense ratio (ie how much you pay them) of .03%. Considering how 20 years ago you might have paid a financial advisor 3%, it’s literally 100th of the cost. QQQM, which tracks the NASDAQ has a GER of .15%, is also good.
As an Italian, you might also be interested in an EWI, which tracks Italian stock performance, and has actually done pretty well the last year. However it has GER of .50%, so you’ll be paying a bit more. I’m not sure if you have access to different products there, so might be something to look in to. European stocks have done pretty well of late, so you may also want to look into ETFs for other countries (DAX for Germany, EWP for Spain, EWQ for France, etc). Finally you may want to consider emerging markets, like EMXC for China.
Again you may have access to different products, I’m not sure how that works, but basically any ETF which tracks a developed or high growth emerging market country would be good to add to your portfolio, and you should prioritize those with low GER to maximize your returns.