Lecture 2: Portfolio Diversification
1. Concept of Diversification and Its Importance in Risk Reduction
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Definition: Diversification is a risk management strategy that involves spreading investments across various assets, sectors, or regions to minimize exposure to any single risk.
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Importance:
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Reduces the impact of poor performance from a single investment.
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Balances risk and return by avoiding over-concentration.
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Based on the principle: "Don’t put all your eggs in one basket."
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2. Types of Diversification
a. Asset Class Diversification
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Allocating investments across different asset classes (e.g., stocks, bonds, real estate, commodities, cash).
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Example: Combining equities (high risk/return) with bonds (lower risk/stable income).
b. Diversification Within an Asset Class
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Spreading investments within a single asset category.
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Equities: Diversify across industries (tech, healthcare, energy) or company sizes (large-cap, mid-cap, small-cap).
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Bonds: Mix government bonds (low risk) with corporate bonds (higher risk).
c. Geographic Diversification
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Investing in multiple regions/countries to mitigate country-specific risks (e.g., political instability, currency fluctuations).
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Example: Holding U.S., European, and emerging market assets.
3. Diversification and Risk Reduction: Systematic vs. Unsystematic Risk
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Unsystematic Risk (Idiosyncratic Risk):
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Specific to a company, industry, or region.
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Can be reduced through diversification (e.g., a tech stock crash offset by stable utility stocks).
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Systematic Risk (Market Risk):
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Affects the entire market (e.g., recessions, interest rate hikes, pandemics).
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Cannot be eliminated by diversification but can be managed through asset allocation (e.g., adding safe-haven assets like gold).
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4. Practical Examples of Building a Diversified Portfolio
Example 1: Basic Diversified Portfolio
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Equities (60%):
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40% U.S. stocks (mix of sectors: tech, healthcare, consumer goods).
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20% International stocks (Europe, Asia, emerging markets).
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Bonds (30%):
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15% U.S. Treasury bonds.
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10% Corporate bonds.
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5% International bonds.
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Alternatives (10%):
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5% Real estate (REITs).
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5% Commodities (gold, oil ETFs).
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Example 2: ETF-Based Diversification
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Use low-cost ETFs to achieve instant diversification:
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Equities: S&P 500 ETF (U.S. stocks), MSCI World ETF (global stocks).
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Bonds: Aggregate Bond ETF (mix of government/corporate bonds).
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Geographic: Emerging Markets ETF.
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Example 3: Rebalancing Strategy
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Start with a 70% stock/30% bond allocation.
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Rebalance annually to maintain the target ratio, selling overperforming assets and buying underperforming ones.
Key Takeaways
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Diversification reduces unsystematic risk but does not eliminate market risk.
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A well-diversified portfolio balances growth (equities) and stability (bonds/alternatives).
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Regularly review and adjust allocations based on market conditions and personal financial goals.
Tools for Implementation:
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Robo-advisors for automated diversification.
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Index funds/ETFs for broad market exposure.
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Geographic diversification through global funds.
By applying these principles, investors can build resilient portfolios tailored to their risk tolerance and objectives.