Diversification: What links markets and society
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Diversification is not a strategy. Diversification is discipline. Anyone building a robust and resilient portfolio does not need a forecast for every market movement. They need structure. Diversification reduces risk – without sacrificing potential returns. That is the practical added value: not hedging at any cost, but robustness as a principle of portfolio construction.
The basic idea is simple: by spreading your investments across multiple asset classes, you reduce your dependence on individual stocks, sectors, regions or market phases. A concentrated portfolio may outperform in good times, but is significantly more vulnerable to setbacks. A broadly diversified portfolio is more stable, holds up better and offers a more balanced relationship between opportunities and risks.
Warren Buffett is often quoted as saying that diversification is a hedge against ignorance. It only makes sense if you don’t know what you’re doing. For us, diversification is not a sign of arbitrariness, but an expression of professional and responsible risk management.
Theoretical basis and objectives
Diversification means spreading capital across different investments – so that no single factor determines success or failure. The aim is to reduce what is known as idiosyncratic or unsystematic risk. These are risks specifically associated with a company, an industry or an issuer. They include, for example, management errors, operational problems, product scandals or regulatory burdens in a single market segment.
The theoretical basis for this is provided by Harry Markowitz’s modern portfolio theory, often described as the stock market’s ‘free lunch’. Its core message is this: what matters is not which individual investments a portfolio contains, but how they relate to one another. It is not the return on a single component that counts, but its interaction with the rest of the portfolio.
This is where the concept of correlation comes into play. It describes whether two investments tend to move in the same direction, independently, or in opposite directions. If two investments react very similarly to economic cycles, inflation or interest rate changes, their combined diversification effect is limited. Conversely, if investments are combined that behave differently in various market phases, the overall risk can decrease, even though the portfolio’s expected return remains attractive. This relationship is illustrated schematically in the chart below. If two assets with 100% correlation are combined in equal weights, the result is exactly halfway between the two – offering no advantage. As the correlation decreases, the risk-return ratio improves. With a correlation of –1, one even achieves the average return of both assets – with zero risk.

A classic example is the combination of equities and high-quality bonds. In many market phases, the two asset classes react differently to growth and interest rate expectations. If the equity market falls due to economic concerns, government bonds or other high-quality bonds can have a stabilising effect. This buffer function is not equally strong in every market phase, but it illustrates the basic principle of professional portfolio construction very clearly.
It is important to distinguish this from systematic risk. General market risks such as global recessions, geopolitical crises, sharp spikes in inflation or liquidity shortages cannot be completely diversified away. Diversification does not eliminate every risk; it makes a portfolio more resilient to avoidable individual losses.
The various dimensions of diversification
In practical portfolio management, it is not enough simply to hold a large number of positions. What matters is the breadth of diversification across different levels. A professionally constructed multi-asset portfolio therefore takes a multi-dimensional approach to diversification.
Asset classes
The most important level is diversification across different asset classes. These typically include equities, bonds, property, commodities and cash. These segments have different drivers of return, react differently to changes in interest rates, inflation, economic trends and political events, and therefore each fulfil a different function within the portfolio.
In the long term, equities primarily represent capital growth, but are associated with higher volatility. Bonds can stabilise returns and take on a more defensive character in certain market phases. Property and infrastructure often provide more real sources of return, whilst commodities are sometimes viewed as a hedge against inflation or supply risks. Cash, on the other hand, offers low expected returns but provides flexibility and reduces short-term volatility.
Geography and currencies
The second key aspect is geographical diversification. Many retail investors tend towards what is known as ‘home bias’, i.e. an excessive focus on the domestic market. Whilst this may seem familiar at first glance, it leads to concentration risks if national economic conditions, politics or sectoral structures have a disproportionate influence on asset performance.
Broader international diversification across North America, Europe, Asia and selected emerging markets can reduce this dependence. Added to this is the currency dimension. Different currency areas do not always perform in the same way and can influence a portfolio’s risk profile. Currency risks should therefore not arise by chance, but be deliberately incorporated. From the perspective of a multi-asset portfolio manager, this is part of sound diversification.
Industries and sectors
Diversification within individual securities, whether equities or bonds, also means allocating capital across different sectors. Technology, industry, healthcare, financials or consumer staples often react differently to growth, interest rates or changes in profit margins. Anyone concentrating their portfolio on a single sector bears a high risk of volatility – regardless of how many individual positions it contains.
The mix of cyclical and defensive sectors is particularly relevant. Cyclical sectors benefit more from economic momentum but often suffer more during downturns. Defensive sectors are frequently more stable during weaker periods. A balanced allocation can help cushion extreme swings.
Company sizes and investment styles
Large, established corporations usually have more robust business models, stronger market positions and broader financing options. Smaller companies, on the other hand, often offer higher growth potential but are frequently more sensitive to economic cycles and liquidity. For this reason, diversification by company size plays a further role.
From a fund investor’s perspective, further levels of diversification are important: investment style, decision-making process and decision-makers. Thus, top-down and bottom-up approaches, discretionary and quantitative methods, or individual decision-makers and teams can lead to different outcomes. Diversification across these dimensions can also help make a portfolio less reliant on a single mindset.
Strategic implementation in day-to-day portfolio management
Diversification is not a one-off act, but an ongoing process. In day-to-day portfolio management, the first question that arises is how many positions an investor actually needs. Whilst unsystematic risk decreases as the number of individual securities increases, the additional benefit of each further security diminishes with the number of additional securities. At some point, the risk structure improves only marginally, and complexity and costs outweigh the benefits.
For investors, this means that the goal is not to hold as many positions as possible, but rather that the right combination makes all the difference. A portfolio with a few, clearly distinct components can be better diversified than a portfolio with many securities that all depend on the same themes. This point is often underestimated, particularly in times of major market trends.
A typical example of hidden cluster risks are portfolios that appear broadly diversified at first glance but are in fact heavily dependent on a single common factor. For instance, someone who combines various technology shares, growth funds and Nasdaq-heavy ETFs technically holds many positions, but remains focused on the same drivers of return. The same applies to investments that are all indirectly influenced by interest rates, the US economy or oil price movements.
It is not enough to simply count the number of positions. The crucial factor is whether the underlying risks actually differ. A multi-asset portfolio manager therefore looks not only at the names of the securities, but also at risk factors: growth, inflation, duration, credit risk, liquidity, currency, style and valuation. It is only at this level that it becomes clear whether a portfolio is truly diversified and therefore robust.
Rebalancing and pitfalls
Rebalancing is often underestimated. Markets do not perform uniformly. If shares rise significantly more than bonds or cash over a prolonged period, their proportion of the portfolio automatically increases. The portfolio then gradually drifts away from its optimal risk structure.
Rebalancing involves regularly monitoring and correcting these shifts. In doing so, investors sell part of the positions that have risen sharply and top up components that have underperformed. This counteracts emotional misjudgements and supports the discipline of acting counter-cyclically. At the same time, it forces investors to continually review the original target allocation and adapt it to changing life circumstances or capital market conditions.
Beware of over-diversification. Too many positions are difficult to monitor, transaction costs rise and returns are unnecessarily diluted. Diversification without a goal is not a strategy – it is mere window dressing. The chart below impressively demonstrates that, on average, the bulk of diversification’s success is achieved with the first 20–30 holdings.


Correlations are not static. In normal market conditions, investments can react quite differently, but in times of stress they may suddenly fall in the same direction. This is precisely why diversification should not be viewed as a rigid concept, but as a dynamic process that needs to be reviewed regularly. A striking example of this is high-yield bonds, which normally have a correlation of around 0.6 with equities. In periods of economic stress, this can quickly converge towards 1. Economically, this makes sense, as in a potential recession these bonds, situated at the lower end of the capital structure, could default and, if necessary, be converted into shares as part of a subsequent restructuring.
What conclusions can be drawn from this?
For private investors, diversification is not a theoretical exercise, but a concrete means of protecting assets. It reduces the likelihood that poor individual decisions or specific market events will disproportionately impact the entire portfolio. At the same time, it increases the chance of remaining invested even during weaker market phases – with an eye on the long-term goal.
When constructing a robust portfolio, three practical rules can be helpful:
- Don’t just hold lots of stocks; instead, deliberately combine different risk drivers
- Consciously limit exposure to your home market, favourite sectors and trendy themes
- Review the portfolio regularly and rebalance it in the event of significant shifts
Long-term investment success does not come from perfect timing. It comes from a robust portfolio and discipline. Diversification is not a barrier to returns. It is the prerequisite for capitalising on opportunities with acceptable risk.
Please contact us at any time if you have questions or suggestions.
ETHENEA Independent Investors S.A.
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