
When it comes to diversifying your portfolio, more is not always better.
Overdiversification often leads to higher fees but does little to mitigate your risks.
What's more, it can dilute your portfolio, reducing the weight of high-performing assets.
Experts agree that diversification is the best way to protect the overall value of your portfolio. By including a mix of investment types that behave differently under specific economic conditions, you can reduce the risk of poor-performing investments.
For example, imagine you invest all your money buying stock in a hot new company and that stock suddenly drops by 40% or 50%. Your portfolio takes the full hit of that loss. However, if you'd spread that money across 20 different stocks, sectors, or asset types, the hit to your portfolio would be minimized because you had plenty of other investments to pick up the slack.
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In short, diversification is essential, but there is such a thing as being too diversified.
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Let's say you're working hard to plan for the future, and frankly, investing makes you nervous. Your anxiety frequently produces thoughts like "What if there's a recession and I can never regain what I've lost?"
There are many different types of investors, and naturally, some are more averse to risk than others. There's nothing wrong with that. It only becomes a problem when you take steps that can ultimately cost you money, like overdiversifying your portfolio with the mistaken belief that it can shield you from losses.
So, if diversification is good but overdiversification is not, how can you tell the difference?
A balanced portfolio is a lot like the perfect bowl of soup. There may be many ingredients, but they work together. Each ingredient plays a specific role. In terms of a portfolio, here's how diversifying can help protect your investment by behaving differently under particular conditions:
Your portfolio may look quite different, and that's OK. The point is to choose investments that tend to react differently to market conditions, so when one is down, the others can keep your portfolio afloat.
When you overdiversify, you run the risk of:
Here are key signs that your portfolio needs rebalancing:
If you're diversifying your portfolio, your decision to do so is spot-on. However, if you're overdiversifying, it can end up costing you money without mitigating risks.
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