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Diversification
vs. Concentration By Chris Stallman
| E-mail You've probably heard the saying, "don't put all of your eggs in one basket." Whoever came up with that was probably someone with a diversified investment portfolio because it's a very pertinent topic in personal finance. Diversification
is the strategy of spreading your money out among a number of investments.
The thought is that if you own many stocks and one does poorly,
your portfolio won't be affected as much. But also, if one
stock does very well, your portfolio won't reap all of the benefits.
So you are supported by all of your stocks, rather than depending
on just one or two. It's highly
unlikely that a new investor will be able to achieve diversification
on their own. Going out and buying 50-100 stocks is pretty
difficult to do. If you invested $1,000 in each of them, you'd
need $50,000-100,000. Not to mention that commissions will
cost you a fortune. So your best way to do this is to invest
in a mutual fund or exchange-traded fund (ETF) that will buy many
stocks for you.
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