When a portfolio is too diverse, it has no chance of beating the market.
If diversification means safety, a lot of it must be good, right?
Wrong!
It’s possible to over-diversify — at a certain point, your returns will start to match the market.
That is not good.
Our goal as investors and traders is to beat the market. Otherwise, we might as well have saved a lot of time (and brokerage fees) by buying one ETF pegged to the market.
The second big mistake people make is even scarier.
Diversifying in just one sector of the market leaves you vulnerable.
Here’s where the followers of Cramer (and other popular talking heads) are led astray.
They’re told to diversify, so they buy up a ton of different stocks. Probably to the point that they’re “over diversified.”
At the same time, their portfolio is shockingly concentrated.
You see, when you’re “over diversified” to the point that you’re matching the underlying asset class you can’t think of all your investments as separate entities.
Essentially these people have ended up investing in ONE THING.
Stocks.
(That doesn’t sound like a diverse portfolio to me.)
I bet you can guess what happens when a major bear market hits. Just like it did in march of 2020.
Everything falls through the floor at once.
Here’s where the “one-man hedge fund” model takes a lead.
When you design your one-man hedge fund you end up choosing investments more like… well a hedge fund.
Small selections of good assets, with proper inverse picks to hedge against them.
This allows us to take advantage of the flow of value from one market to another. While protecting ourselves. While avoiding the trap of over-diversification in ONE asset class (I’ll go more into this in tomorrow's lesson.)
To finish off today I want to talk about how the “one-man hedge fund” model takes things a step further than just copying the hedge fund model.
This technique allows you to experience the benefits of “true diversification.”
It all comes down to the “bucket” system we learned about in Lesson #2.
If we separate our portfolio into 3-5 buckets it’s almost like having our money invested in the same number of hedge funds.
(Hedge funds we know we can trust AND we know are working together… because we designed them ourselves)
It might be best if we return to that quote about diversification. The one we all learned in grade school.
“Don’t keep all your eggs in one basket.”
The kind of “false diversification” that the talking heads advocate for, where you just pick a bundle of different stocks … well, that isn’t multiple baskets at all.
It’s just one big basket, and when something happens to it, all those eggs are going to shatter …