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The Limits of Diversification

The Limits of Diversification

“To reduce risk it is necessary to avoid a portfolio whose securities are all highly correlated” — Harry Markowitz

3 min read

The Limits of Diversification

“To reduce risk it is necessary to avoid a portfolio whose securities are all highly correlated” — Harry Markowitz

3 min read

Listen to this article

Diversification is often cited as one of the most important principles in successful investing, and history has generally supported that view.

By spreading investments across different assets, sectors, regions, and economic drivers, diversification helps reduce concentration risk and avoids excessive reliance on any single investment outcome.

However, diversification is not designed to eliminate risk altogether.

During periods of significant market stress, investments that would normally behave differently can respond in a similar way due to the same underlying pressures.

This is known as correlation risk.

What is correlation risk?

Correlation risk is the danger that assets, strategies, or economic factors may become more closely linked than expected, reducing the benefits of diversification and increasing potential losses during market downturns.

When two investments are highly correlated, they tend to rise and fall at similar times. When correlation is low, their returns are more independent of one another.

The challenge for investors is that correlations are not fixed and can change significantly over time. Assets that appear well diversified during normal market conditions may become increasingly correlated during periods of economic uncertainty or market stress, reducing the protection that diversification would otherwise be expected to provide.

When markets move together

Periods of rising correlation do not mean diversification has become ineffective. Rather, they reflect the fact that many investments are ultimately influenced by a number of the same underlying economic and market forces.

During periods of heightened volatility, investors often reassess risk across large parts of the market simultaneously. This can result in broad selling across multiple asset classes, sectors, and regions, even where the underlying fundamentals remain different.

As a result, investments that would normally exhibit lower levels of correlation can begin moving more closely together, particularly over shorter periods.

Many growth-oriented investments ultimately share common drivers including:

  • Economic growth 
  • Corporate profitability 
  • Interest rates 
  • Investor confidence 
  • Liquidity conditions

When these factors deteriorate, many growth assets can come under pressure at the same time.

However, this does not mean all investments are exposed to identical risks to the same degree. Even within equity markets, different regions, sectors, and companies are influenced by different economic conditions, valuations, competitive advantages, and long-term growth drivers.

Why diversification still matters 

Equities have historically been one of the primary drivers of long-term capital growth. Consequently, accepting some degree of correlation risk is often an unavoidable aspect of seeking higher long-term returns.

The aim is not to eliminate correlation risk altogether. Instead, it is to reduce unnecessary concentration by spreading exposure across a broad range of investments, regions, sectors, and economic drivers.

For example, a portfolio invested entirely in large US technology companies may deliver strong returns during favourable market conditions. However, it would also be heavily exposed to developments affecting a relatively narrow part of the market.

By contrast, a globally diversified growth portfolio spreads exposure across different countries, industries, companies, and sources of return. While many of the underlying investments may still be influenced by the broader forces affecting equity markets, the portfolio is not solely dependent on a single sector, region, or economic outcome.

In practice, diversification often involves combining investments across a range of asset classes and markets, including:

  • Developed market equities 
  • Emerging market equities 
  • Government bonds 
  • Corporate bonds 
  • Cash 
  • Property and infrastructure 
  • Other real assets 

These assets may not always move independently, particularly during periods of market stress. However, they can respond differently over longer periods of time and under different economic conditions, which is why diversification remains a key part of portfolio construction.

Structuring portfolios for long-term resilience

Correlation risk reminds investors that markets are constantly evolving. Relationships between investments that appear stable during one period may look very different when economic conditions, investor sentiment, interest rates, or geopolitical events change.

For this reason, portfolio construction should not rely solely on how investments have behaved in the past. Consideration must also be given to the underlying drivers of returns and how different investments may respond under a range of future market conditions.

At Patterson Mills, we work with clients to build portfolios that seek to balance long-term growth objectives with effective risk management. While no portfolio can eliminate market risk entirely, careful diversification, regular review, and disciplined portfolio construction can help investors remain resilient in an environment where market relationships are rarely static.

If you would like to review whether your current investments remain appropriately diversified and aligned with your long-term objectives, contactez-nous with us today and book your initial, no-cost and no-obligation meeting.

Send us an e-mail to contactus@pattersonmills.ch or call us direct at +41 21 801 36 84 and we shall be pleased to assist you.

Please note that all content within this article has been prepared for information purposes only. This article does not constitute financial, legal or tax advice. Always ensure you speak to a regulated Financial Adviser before making any financial decisions.

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Investments

How To Diversify Your Portfolio

How To Diversify Your Portfolio

“As in most subjects relating to money management, there’s a wide diversity of opinion on portfolio concentration versus diversification” – Whitney Tilson

3 min read

How To Diversify Your Portfolio

“As in most subjects relating to money management, there’s a wide diversity of opinion on portfolio concentration versus diversification.” – Whitney Tilson

3 min read

You will often hear that diversifying your investments is a crucial strategy to mitigate risk(s).

What you will find less often is exactly how to do this.

Read on to find out how you can diversify your portfolio, considerations you need to make, and what to look for as you continue, or begin, your investment journey.

What is Diversification?

First of all, it is important to know just what diversification involves.

In brief, it involves spreading your investments across various asset classes, sectors, and geographies, with the goal being to reduce exposure to any single investment, thereby minimising the impact of poor performance in one area on your overall portfolio.

Using equities as an example, you would invest in more than just one single company.

Why Diversify?

The reason you may want to consider diversification is quite simple.

It aims to reduce risk, enhance returns, and achieve a good balance for stability in all market conditions.

Asset Classes

There are many asset classes, even beyond what you will see below.

However, the first step in diversification is understanding the main different asset classes. 

These include:

  • Equities
  • Bonds
  • Cash
  • Real Estate
  • Commodities

Equities represent ownership in a company, and bonds are loans to governments or corporations.

Cash includes savings accounts and money market funds.

Real estate investments are in property, and commodities invest in other physical assets like gold or oil.
How Do You Diversify?

There are many methods of diversification, including between sectors, geographies and within asset classes themselves.

Sector Diversification

Investing in various sectors would mean spreading risk between sectors such as technology, healthcare, energy. and consumer goods.

Each sector offers different advantages (and disadvantages) such as high growth but volatile, steady but less growth, etc.

Geographical Diversification

Geographical diversification does what it says on the tin; spreads risk between different countries and regions.

This can help with risk associated with economic and political instability.

Domestic investments include those within your country of residence.

International investments include exposure to global markets.

Diversifying Within Asset Classes

Diversifying within asset classes helps you differentiate between large-cap stocks, small-cap stocks, growth stocks, or value stocks.

Large-cap are generally established companies, small-cap are, you guessed it, smaller companies (but with high growth potential and more risk), growth stocks are those that are expected to grow faster than the market, and value stocks are companies trading below their intrinsic value.

Investment Funds

Investment funds like mutual funds and exchange-traded funds (ETFs) are excellent tools for diversification.

They pool money from many investors to buy a broad range of assets, providing instant diversification often at a very low cost.

How Much Diversification Is Too Much?

This question is an entirely new article in itself!

There are many debates over how much is too much, but one thing is for certain: it depends on your personal circumstances.

If you want to know the answer that is best for you, make sure to get in touch with us today and book your initial, no-cost and no-obligation meeting.

Your successful financial future awaits!

Send us an e-mail to contactus@pattersonmills.ch or call us direct at +41 21 801 36 84 and we shall be pleased to assist you.

Please note that all content within this article has been prepared for information purposes only. This article does not constitute financial, legal or tax advice. Always ensure you speak to a regulated Financial Adviser before making any financial decisions.

Catégories
Investments

Diversification: Investing in an Unpredictable World

Diversification: Investing in an Unpredictable World

“Know what you own, and know why you own it” – Peter Lynch

2 min read

Diversification: Investing in an Unpredictable World

“Know what you own, and know why you own it” – Peter Lynch

2 min read

Why is diversification an important part of investing? In practical terms, diversification is holding investments that will react differently to the same market or economic event. Generally speaking, there are four broad asset classes: cash, fixed interest (bonds), property and shares (equities). Since performance in any one asset class can be unpredictable depending on shifts in the market, investing across several asset classes can provide greater diversification potential. Therefore, if one asset class performs favourably, it can potentially offset another that is performing less favourably, providing more balance to your portfolio when market shifts occur.

Range of Assets

One of the most effective ways to manage investment risk is to spread your money across a range of assets that, historically, have tended to perform differently in the same circumstances. This is called ‘diversification’ – reducing the risk of your portfolio by choosing a mix of investments. In the most general sense, there are many adages: ‘Don’t put all of your eggs in one basket’, ‘Buy low, sell high’, and, ‘Bears and bulls make money, but pigs get slaughtered’. While that sentiment certainly captures the essence of the issue, it provides little guidance on the practical implications of the role that diversification plays in a portfolio. Therefore, though it may sound simple, ultimately, there is no such thing as a ‘one-size-fits-all’ approach.

Spreading Your Investments Within Asset Classes

There are four main types of investment, known as ‘asset classes’. Each asset class has different characteristics, advantages and disadvantages for investors, with the main ones detailed below.

While it cannot guarantee against losses, diversifying your portfolio effectively is vital to achieving your long-term financial goals whilst minimising risk. Although you can diversify within one asset class – for instance, by holding shares (or equities) in several companies that operate in different sectors – this will fail to insulate you from systemic risks, such as international stock market volatility. Another example of diversifying within asset classes would be corporate bonds and government bonds as they can offer very different propositions, with the former tending to offer higher possible returns but with a higher risk of defaults, or bond repayments not being met by the issuer.

Diversify Across Assets Valued in Different Currencies

Effective diversification is likely to allocate investments across different countries and regions in order to help insulate your portfolio from local market crises or downturns, as we’ve been seeing recently. Markets around the world tend to perform differently day to day, reflecting shortterm sentiment and long-term trends.

There is, however, the added danger of currency risk when investing in different countries, as the value of international currencies relative to each other changes all the time. Diversifying across assets valued in different currencies, or investing in so-called ‘hedged’ assets that look to minimise the impact from currency swings, should reduce the weakness of any one currency, significantly decreasing the total value of your portfolio.

Creating a More Effectively Diversified Portfolio

Achieving effective diversification across and within asset classes, regions and currencies can be difficult and typically beyond the means of individual investors. Individual funds often focus on one asset class, and sometimes even one region, and therefore typically only offer limited diversification on their own. By investing in several funds, which between them cover a breadth of underlying assets, investors can create a more effectively diversified portfolio. Multi-asset funds hold a blend of different types of assets designed to offer immediate diversification with one single investment. Broadly speaking, their aim is to offer investors the prospect of less volatile returns by not relying on the fortunes of just one asset class.

Shape Your Personal Financial Journey

There is no crystal ball, and so in such unpredictable times we are here to help you shape your personal financial journey. We take the time to understand your ambitions and support you to achieve them through our long-term thinking and expertise borne of experience.

To find out more, please contactez-nous dès aujourd'hui and book your initial, free, no-obligation meeting. Send us an e-mail to info@pattersonmills.ch or call us direct at +41 21 801 36 84.