To quote Darvas
"Diversifying over a large number of stocks leads to only average performance. Since only 3 or 4 will produce big profits the remaining stocks drag the performance down.
Darvas is
wrong about that, or at the very least the way he's expressing it there is misleading to people, and he may well be misleading himself (as surprisingly many people do, over simple statistical points, by completely overlooking something inconvenient to their existing perspectives).
As so often, the problem with his logic is with the causation: it's the word "since" that's misguided, and therefore the whole logic is. He's using the same woolly thinking, there, that he sometimes criticized in others.
Even accepting that the first sentence is true, the idea that because only 3 or 4 will produce big profits (typically true) the remainder will "drag the performance down" is sloppy thinking of the worst kind: it will drag the average performance down, yes, and it's easy for the reader to imagine that that's all he's contending, but it isn't. What he should realize, and say, is that it would be better to buy
just the 3 or 4 stocks that turned out to produce the big profits, but of course that misses the point that one didn't know confidently, in advance, which ones they'd be, without the benefit of hindsight. So it's true that diversifying is worse than "magic, hindsight-based selection", but since that isn't actually available to any of us, it's not exactly relevant or helpful to point it out ... particularly when - as there - he does so to try to imply something well beyond what's actually true!
He's just
wrong that diversifying over a large number of stocks doesn't mitigate risk:
of course it does - it mitigates selection-risk, and increases the probability of covering whichever 3 or 4 might actually turn out to produce big profits.
Even some reasonably "established"/"respected" authors repeatedly fall into these "sloppy thinking statistical traps" with what they write about trading, and Darvas (for anyone who puts him in that group!) is certainly no exception.
"A little knowledge is a dangerous thing."
