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Source/Contribution by : NJ Publications
"Don't put all your eggs in one basket" - every investor has heard this advice. For mutual fund investors, this often translates to holding a large number of schemes, believing that a portfolio with ten or more funds is automatically well-diversified. But what if this is a costly illusion?
The Diversification Illusion
Simply accumulating multiple funds doesn't guarantee true diversification. In many cases, it can lead to portfolio overlap, where different funds hold many of the same underlying stocks, leading to a concentrated portfolio rather than a diversified one. This can amplify risk and make your portfolio more vulnerable to market downturns. So, how can you build a genuinely resilient portfolio that protects you from the illusion of diversification?
What Real Diversification Looks Like
A truly diversified mutual fund portfolio balances different asset classes, investment categories, and styles so that when one part underperforms, another cushions the impact.
1. Diversification at the Asset Allocation Level
The most critical decision you will make is how to allocate your capital. Your portfolio should be a strategic blend of assets that have low or negative correlation with each other. A good portfolio should have exposure to:
By mixing asset classes, you ensure that not all investments move in the same direction at the same time. Your final asset allocation should be a function of your financial needs and risk tolerance.
2. Diversification Across Categories within Equity
Even within equities, funds can be chosen to balance stability and growth:
3. Diversification Through Investment Styles
Investment styles represent different philosophies of Investing. Mixing styles brings balance to the portfolio:
4. Diversification by Strategy
Mutual funds also differ in the strategy they follow to construct portfolios:
a) Active Funds: The Alpha-Seeker
b) Passive Funds: The Beta-Capturer
c) Factor-based/Rule-Based Funds
These funds can capture unique return streams and reduce correlation with traditional market-cap-weighted indices.
Principles of Building a Resilient Portfolio
Once you've chosen your funds based on the above layers, it's time to validate your strategy.
Holding too many funds often leads to owning the same stocks multiple times, reducing the benefit of diversification. Use portfolio overlap tools to ensure your schemes complement each other rather than mirror each other.
A small, focused portfolio is easier to track and manage. Beyond 6-7 funds, returns often get diluted, and monitoring performance becomes unnecessarily complicated.
Spreading across asset classes ensures your portfolio doesn’t rely on just one market. While equity drives long-term growth, debt provides safety, and gold or international funds act as hedges during uncertainty.
Combine different investing styles (growth + value) and strategies (active + passive/Factor-based). This reduces the risk of one approach underperforming for a long period.
Portfolios must evolve with time. An annual review helps weed out duplication and realign investments with your financial needs and risk profile.
Final Word
True diversification is not about having "many funds", but about having the right mix. By spreading across asset classes, categories, styles, and strategies, investors can create a portfolio that is resilient, manageable, and need-based.
Because in investing, smart diversification protects wealth - blind diversification only complicates it.
Disclaimer: Mutual Fund investments are subject to market risks, read all the scheme related documents carefully.
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