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A Simple Way To Diversify Your Portfolio

The Dynamic Wealth Report
August 27, 2008

The Insider Secret To Diversification


Wall Street’s full of famous sayings.  Some are funny.  Some are serious. But they all carry little bits of invaluable wisdom that can’t be ignored. Some of my favorites are:

“Bulls and Bears get rich, but pigs get slaughtered.”

“Nobody ever lost money taking a profit.”

“A rising tide lifts all boats.”

So what do these sayings have to do with investing?

All of these lyrical gems, and hundreds of others, are grounded in reality. What they lack in specifics, they make up in wisdom.  Not being too fearful to invest, not being too greedy, cutting your losses, and letting your winners run.

You could spend an entire year analyzing each and every saying.  But you’ll quickly realize that some of them are more important than others.

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One that’s really important:  “Don’t put all your eggs in one basket.”

It’s a simple thought but carries a lot of deeper wisdom.  It speaks to the importance of investment diversification.  Unfortunately many investors don’t follow this wisdom.  Eventually every investor learns the lesson . . . some the hard way.  Remember all the investors who’s life savings were invested in Enron?  Their tragedy could have been avoided by simply diversifying their investments.

But diversification isn’t simple.  How do you know if you’re diversified?

Before I get to that, let me make one point.  Diversification is a double-edged sword.  If you aren’t diversified enough you’re putting your investment portfolio at risk.  However, if you’re too diversified, a big gain from an investment has little impact on your overall portfolio.

Some financial institutions have complex computer software programs which tell you if you’re diversified or not.  But, believe it or not, I have a very simple way of looking at investing.  If you’re going to invest in individual companies the minimum I recommend is 20 stocks.

Why 20?

I wish I could say the number 20 was calculated by a super-computer or developed by a math wizard.  But it wasn’t.  I actually calculated the number using a little simple logic, and the back of an envelope.

Here’s how I figured it out.

Take your portfolio and divide it into 20 parts.  You’ll find each investment makes up 5% of your entire portfolio.  Now diversification is all about limiting risk.  So, each investment in your portfolio should have a stop-loss level or a point at which you will exit the position if it falls.

I don’t have time to go into all the details of stop-losses here, that’s for another article. All you need to know is in general most investors use a stop loss level of 20%.

So a little math.  With 20 investments and 5% of your portfolio into each, and a 20% stop loss . . . your maximum risk on any stock is 1% of your portfolio.  If you lose 1% of your investment portfolio it’s a loss you can recover from.

It’s a simple way to invest, yet it protects you from catastrophic loss. And catastrophic loss has a tendency to knock would-be investors out of the market – for good.

Again, this is only a rule of thumb.  Determining what’s appropriate for you might take a little more work.  And, I’ll leave you with this one thought.  Like everything in life, there can be exceptions.

One famous investor even quipped, “I recommend putting all your eggs in one basket, and watching that basket very closely.”


Commodity Watch 

• Oil ($118 per barrel)

Crude oil is rising on a slight fall in inventories and concerns about Tropical Storm Gustav.  Oil inventories fell by 177,000 barrels last week which may indicate demand is increasing.  Traders are concerned that Gustav will disrupt refining operations in the Gulf of Mexico which could lead to supply problems.


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Issue Date:
 Wednesday, August 27, 2008


Notable Highs and Lows

 Ikon (IKN) hit a new 52-week high of $17.23 on news that Japanese company, Ricoh, will buy Ikon for $17.25 per share.  The deal is expected to close in the fourth quarter.  Ikon shares are up 31% in 2008.

 Cemex (CX) hit a new 52-week low of $18.87 after Venezuela seized the company’s subsidiary.  Venezuela announced in April it would nationalize about 60% of foreign cement makers. Cemex has a market cap of over $16 billion.

•  J Crew (JCG) fell to a new 52-week low of just under $24 after reporting a 2nd quarter earnings miss.  Net income fell 12% and the company lowered its fiscal year earnings outlook.


Quote of the Day

"Investors repeatedly jump ship on a good strategy just because it hasn’t worked so well lately, and, almost invariably, abandon it at precisely the wrong time."

                       -
David Dreman

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