Diversification good or bad?

Diversification is the holy grail.

  • Stay Diversified

    Votes: 8 72.7%
  • Concentrate your portfolio in just a few stocks.

    Votes: 2 18.2%
  • Stay with Cramer

    Votes: 1 9.1%
  • Way too many polls here on ET

    Votes: 0 0.0%

  • Total voters
    11
  • Poll closed .
Then why all the questions , the searching?
I usually ask questions that another trader can answer for themselves. I like to challenge conventional wisdom. Rather than dismiss something off hand I like too see if it's something that I've overlooked. So I ask questions. Might help me; might help the person I'm asking

Also I can always learn something new.
The only holy grail is between your ears. :)
You're getting close. :)
 
What if the opposite has happened and it has gone down to 10%? Consider both the outcomes of the scenario. If you are really updated with all the new knowledge, you must know that financial markets is the name of the unexpected. Diversification is the best way to play defensive but I see being defensive really offends you. Congratulations on your gains. Enjoy and let me live my old- school theory. Peace out!

If you are typing to me...

When the offense is winning, you do not put money on the defensive team! For 12 years the markets have been on the offense in growth! So put your money into the offensive! Especially after end of 2015!

For crying out LOUD! My offensive plays DID go down like 15% from entry, but at this point are back up to +15%. Don't panic, believe in the plan, and believe in the markets!

Except T (AT&T). That is the worst POS ever. High-div BS. I should have used that money to get into BTC or SHIB or Doge or whatever, but I am not that sophisticated.
 
The more diversified your funds are, the more you have chances of making money. You will be able to cover your costs from one or the other investment.
 
The more diversified your funds are, the more you have chances of making money. You will be able to cover your costs from one or the other investment.
But it works both ways. You don't lose as much but you don't make as much. The more diversified you are the more you trend towards average.
 
If you are typing to me...

When the offense is winning, you do not put money on the defensive team! For 12 years the markets have been on the offense in growth! So put your money into the offensive! Especially after end of 2015!

For crying out LOUD! My offensive plays DID go down like 15% from entry, but at this point are back up to +15%. Don't panic, believe in the plan, and believe in the markets!

Except T (AT&T). That is the worst POS ever. High-div BS. I should have used that money to get into BTC or SHIB or Doge or whatever, but I am not that sophisticated.
Good for you. However I feel safe with a diversified portfolio. Diversification can decrease the potential returns but it is an important part of my risk management strategy.
 
You will still have unpleasant losses. Just not in all asset classes. It also prevent you from experiencing above average gains for the same reason it offsets losses.

If you are only diversifying with an equity portfolio you are wasting your time. In a market downturn most equities will fall.
Yes, definitely. When we try to reduce our risk we are also reducing the potential gains because somehow risks and profits are directly proportional to each other.

Moreover for diversification, we should always choose the assets that are less correlated. There’s no point in trading the same kind of assets which will give you similar returns.
 
Diversification is always good. You can never know when and how market turns against your side. I agree with @waynejackson choose those assets that are less correlated. Less relative mobility in prices.
 
But it works both ways. You don't lose as much but you don't make as much. The more diversified you are the more you trend towards average.
That’s right too. But I am the kind of trader who likes to play it safe. Once a particular asset starts giving me better profits, I will be ready to take more risks on that but not unless I am sure.
 
Diversification is a useful way to mitigate the risk of huge losses and increasing the chances of survival in the market. To get maximum benefit out of your diversified portfolio, you should actively monitor and track price movements. It can better be done if you have a small portfolio with 4-5 instruments only.

I have over 75 stocks, 60% were bought in 2008--all were dividend/optionable, rest were bought when signals happen whether dividend or not but had to be optionable. When I learned how to hedge on opening positions gave me confidence and start using margin.

There is other types of Diversification besides number and sectors in stocks, like Commodities, and options. In my youth there was dollar cost averaging buying, and now am doing Dollar cost averaging Selling, each month been selling off 10% of my dividend stocks for past couple months and shifting funds to Commodities and options. Although I am hedged using short Indexes for remainder of stock position and also short Indexes as trying to find extremes, better percentages can be had in other than stocks right now.

I won't be buying much stocks till another crash happens like 2008.
 
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