No Diversification vs. too Much Diversification, How to Strike a Balance for your Investment?
Trying to make the most of diversification too much diversification? You are in the right place. Below we break it down in plain English, with practical tips you can actually use.
Key Takeaways
- (adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({}); In terms of investment, diversification is a method that can be defined as the...
- Diversification is needed because the prices of all the assets do not rise or fall at the same time, hence there is less risk of loss at an...
- Therefore, people who want to keep their rate of risk as low as possible diversify their investments, at least to some extent.
In terms of investment, diversification is a method that can be defined as the lessening of danger of loss by investing in a variety of assets rather than investing the whole amount in one asset.
Diversification is needed because the prices of all the assets do not rise or fall at the same time, hence there is less risk of loss at an average level. Therefore, people who want to keep their rate of risk as low as possible diversify their investments, at least to some extent.
Example:
A very straightforward and simple example of diversification can be explained by the maxim “Don’t put all your eggs in one basket.” If you drop the basket, all the eggs will break at the same time. Meanwhile, diversifying the eggs in a number of baskets will reduce the risk of breaking all the eggs at once. There is the risk of losing one, or a few, eggs, but that risk is permissible compared to the risk of losing all of them.
In terms of finance, an undiversified investment strategy would be to invest all of one’s money in the stock of only one company. This is chancy; the company’s stock value can fall dramatically, causing one to lose all of the investment. Meanwhile, if money is invested in the stocks of more than 10 companies, the risk is lessened, as a few companies may profit, while the value of others may decreasing, resulting in “balance.”
No investment diversification
I can share my experience with no diversification. During the 2008 stock market crisis I put most of my stock investment money in just one stock Washington Mutual, when it became sub $10 stock I bought some, when it came down to $5, I bought some more. When it became a $2 stock I bought even more WaMu. On the very last day I bought a few thousand of WaMu at $0.80.
I thought WaMu was too big to fail and Fed won’t let WaMu fail like Lehman Bros. I lost quiet a few grands in the process. Till date this was my biggest investment failure and financial mistake. I don’t want to let that happen to any one else. Now I carefully do my investment (read where to invest my money).
People may think that diversifying investments reduces profit; when there is investment in more than one place, one option may result in profit and the other in loss, and the investor might feel that had he/she invested in one place, chances of profit would have been greater.The Apple stock may give you largest of profits, but, I would say if you’re only invested in Apple, get rid of some and purchase other stocks.
People also tend to believe that if investment is made by closely studying the area of investment, diversification is not needed. Diversification can bind your profits if a certain company or sector goes through a period of unusual growth. Creating a properly diversified investment portfolio that guards you from all loss is unattainable.
Pros & cons of no investment diversification:
- If you have invested in different divisions of the market that don’t move at the same pace, an increase in the revenue by the more profitable sectors will balance out cost downfalls in the less profitable sectors of the market. Diversification also saves one from the harms of depressing surprise news on one of your investments.
- Part of the advantage of not diversifying is in its straightforwardness. The investor chooses one, or at the most two, areas where he/she feels confident investing, and is satisfied with that.
- There is no headache of everyday management, changing investments every day, keeping track of the stock market, etc.
- On the other hand, investing all your money in one place is a large risk, if one’s luck runs out, the end result could be huge losses
Too much diversification
Diversification of money is good, no doubt and, there is no limit or figure that shows that too much diversification is negative. Nevertheless, at some point one will realize that further diversification is of no use. Adding more stocks to your investment ceases to make a difference.
About how much diversification are needed to reduce risk while maintaining high returns is debatable, and the most predictable view argues that an investor can attain the most advantageous diversification with 15 to 20 stocks spread across various industries.
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- If you have invested in different divisions of the market that don’t move at the same pace, an increase in the revenue by the more profitable sectors will balance out cost downfalls in the less profitable sectors of the market. Diversification also saves one from the harms of depressing surprise news on one of your investments.
- Diversification provides the advantage that if one of the investments results in a loss, your entire savings and investment won’t have been wiped out.
- The disadvantage with diversification is that you won’t have the opportunity to make the largest return with your best investment, there is an upper limit along with the lower limit.
- The most risky investments are those that are entirely based on luck, they may give you the maximum returns and largest profits or the maximum losses. However, if you have your investments in different sectors, then it is highly unlikely that you will receive huge gains on all of those investments.
How to strike a balance
It is always better not to go for the extreme sides of anything. Staying in the middle is the best way to play the game, along with avoiding at least 50% danger. Not diversifying your investments at all can result in huge losses at once, and diversifying too much can result in minimum profits.
Hence, it is better to diversify investments in a few sectors to avoid risk and also keep profits at maximum potential. US securities and exchange commission has a very valuable beginners guide to asset diversification, it’s a good read too. I want you to read it and make your own decision. Start investing now and never look back.
Readers, what extent of diversification you follow in your investment strategy? Like to share some example with us?
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The bottom line: a little research on diversification too much diversification goes a long way. Compare your options, watch for seasonal offers, and never pay full price when a better deal is one click away.
Originally published at onecentatatime.com.
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