Portfolio Diversification

How Do I Build a Diversified Portfolio?

Understanding what it means to build a diversified portfolio is one of the first concepts a new investor needs to understand. When talking about stocks, diversification means to make sure you do not “put all of your eggs in one basket.”

What Does It Mean To Diversify?

Simply put, to “diversify” means to make sure pick a variety of stocks in different industries. History shows that at different points in time, different parts of the market outperform the others. At times the technology stocks perform well, sometimes its the banking stocks, sometimes its international stocks, sometimes its defense, sometimes its medical, etc. Since it is difficult to predict which industry is going to perform the best in the future, the best thing to do is to just own a few stocks in each industry so that you always own some of the top performing stocks. This way, over time, your portfolio returns are less volatile and, hopefully, always positive.

With real money, most advisers would recommend you have about 30 stocks in your portfolio, but with your virtual portfolio, you should try to have at least 10 stocks in your portfolio and those stocks should be from at least 5 different industries.

Why Do People Diversify?

Investors diversify because it helps to stabilize a portfolio’s return, and the more stocks you own, the more likely you are to own a stock that ends up doubling or tripling in price.

For example, if you own an equal dollar amount of 10 different stocks, and 9 of them stayed at the same price but one of them doubled, your portfolio would be up 10%.

People invest in the stock market because they want to make more money than they could make if they just left the money in the bank. Investors especially do not want to LOSE money. “Capital Preservation” is the idea that you want to preserve the money you have invested; investors never want to be in a position where it would have been better to not have invested at all. So to make sure that they are protected from price swings from any single stock or industry, investors try to maintain a fully diversified portfolio.

How Does It Work?

When you diversify your portfolio, you make sure that you never have “too many eggs in one basket.” If one of the stocks you have invested in starts to go down in price, you have limited your exposure to that stock by only having a smaller percentage of all your assets in that stock. For beginners, this can mean having no more than 20% of your portfolio in any one stock, ETF, or mutual fund. With real money, as you invest more money into your portfolio and as your portfolio grows in value, you should keep buying different stocks so that eventually you have less than 10% of your money in any one stock, and less than 20% of your money in any one industry.

For example, if you are investing in stocks in the Banking, Energy, Healthcare, Manufacturing, Luxury and IT industries, you would try to spread your money as evenly as possible across these industries. This way, if the Energy industry as a whole starts to have problems (for example, if the price of oil falls quickly), you don’t have to worry about your entire portfolio, and you have limited the losses you are exposed to from a single market shock.

Types of Diversification

There are 2 main types of diversification to think about as you first start investing:

1. Sector/Industry Diversification

To “diversify by sector” means that you would split your investments across companies based on the type of business they do; “Energy” companies would be oil producers, electricity companies, and companies that specialize in transporting materials needed for energy production. “Manufacturing” companies are firms that build everything from toys to cars to equipment to airplanes.

An example of a portfolio that is diversified between several sectors

The idea behind sector diversification is that if there is some larger trend that negatively affects an entire industry, you would want to make sure not all of your investments are affected at once. For example, low oil prices caused a general decline in energy stocks (of course, with some companies still growing, and others hit especially hard).

If you’re looking for a good way to find stocks in different sectors, Click Here to see how to research stocks by sector.

2. Stock Diversification

This is the most basic type: just making sure you don’t have too much money in any one stock. For example, if you want to put 10% of your money in the banking sector, that doesn’t mean you should put 10% of your money in Bank of America. You should have a few bank stocks in case one of your bank stocks is poorly managed and it goes bankrupt. Individual stocks are more volatile than sectors, and sectors are more volatile than entire security types, so this is the core of all diversification.

Asset Allocation

Asset Allocatoin means owning a variety of investments like real estate, stocks, bonds, gold/silver and cash. Yes, cash is an investment! For many years, the rule of thumb was to subtract your age from 100, and have that percentage of your overall value invested in stocks (so if you are 18 years old, you would invest 82% of your portfolio in stocks).

The idea is that over time stocks have consistently outperformed other investments so therefore the younger you are, the more you should be invested in stocks. As you get older and closer to retirement when you will rely on your investments, you have less time and you should prefer the low but consistent returns of bonds and cash. Another way of putting this is that younger investors are more risk-tolerant and older investors are more risk-adverse.

This line of thinking is getting to be a little out-dated, with the rising popularity of ETFs, more choices for mutual funds, and the ability to invest in riskier bonds, but the idea of making your portfolio more risk-averse over time can still be a good idea.

Asset allocation is different from diversification – you might have a wide asset allocation, with almost no diversification!

For example, if you divided a $10,000 portfolio between 3 asset classes (Stocks, ETFs, and Mutual Funds), you could have the following holdings:

  • Stocks – Celgene Corporation CELG and UnitedHealth Group (UNH)
  • ETF – Spdr S&p Biotech Etf (XBI)
  • Mutual Fund – Vanguard Health Care Fund (VGHCX)

You might be divided between 3 asset classes, but the entire portfolio is still concentrated on Healthcare/Biotechnology, so it is not diversified at all.

Ways To Stay Diversified

Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs) and mutual funds are good places to start investing because the securities are diversified themselves. ETFs and mutual funds take money from investors and invest that money in a variety of securities that meet the stated objective of that fund.

Some funds invest in large companies, some in European companies, some in utilities, some in commodities like gold and oil, etc. For example the ETF FHLC is a collection of Health Care stocks. If you are looking for an easy way to invest in a particular industry, without having to research which particular companies you want to choose, this is a quick route to take.

Warning About Over-Diversification

Diversifying is good, but don’t go too far! If you start diversifying too much, your portfolio starts to get “thin”; you might not lose much if one company starts to go down, but you also won’t gain much if another company you own starts doing very well. Beginners should usually build their first portfolio with between 8 and 10 stocks, ETFs, or Mutual Funds at a time. You can always switch the investments you have, but try to avoid having too many, or two few, investments at once.

Over-Diversification can also make it more difficult to manage your investments; if you are not able to follow up with company news and stay on top of your investments, things could start turning bad, and you could start losing one before you even know why!

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