The Big Picture

Last Updated: 17-Jul-26 16:10 ET | Archive
The cost of concentration

Briefing.com Summary:

*Rotation away from growth stocks reinforced why diversification within an equity portfolio remains an essential risk-management tool.

*Diversification across sectors, styles, and market capitalizations can help cushion losses when market leadership changes.

*Successful investors prepare for market rotations rather than trying to predict them.

 

The stock market provided investors a tuition-free lesson this week, even if it might not have been a cost-free experience for everyone.

That lesson: diversification still matters.

Shift Work

Every bull market creates the temptation to abandon diversification. When one group of stocks consistently outperforms, concentration appears rewarding. Until it isn't.

The past week was not kind to high-beta stocks or growth stocks in general. It was not kind to the mega-cap cohort any more than it was kind to the micro-cap cohort.

Investor sentiment shifted quickly, although exactly why remains open to debate. 

There were several possible catalysts, including an unwinding of momentum trades in semiconductors, hawkish commentary from Federal Reserve officials, rising oil prices, concerns about increasingly speculative positioning, including leveraged ETFs, and contrarian sentiment indicators suggesting positioning had become overly optimistic.

Whether any one explanation deserves the most credit is almost beside the point. Objectively speaking, the market stopped rewarding the same growth-oriented leadership that had dominated for months.

The numbers tell the story. The VanEck Semiconductor ETF (SMH) dropped 8.9% and sliced through its 50-day moving average. The Invesco S&P 500 High Beta ETF (SPHB) declined 5.7% and sliced through its 50-day moving average. The Russell 3000 Growth Index was down 3.4% and tested support at its 200-day moving average, while the Vanguard Mega-Cap Growth ETF (MGK) fell 2.5% and slipped below its 50-day moving average.

The technical damage isn't catastrophic, but it serves as a reminder that leadership can change much faster than investors expect.

Perspective is important, too. Even after this week's decline, the SMH remains up roughly 90% over the past year. Recent weakness doesn't erase outstanding long-term performance, but it does illustrate how quickly gains can retrace when positioning becomes crowded.

Losing Hurts

Still, it is natural to feel worse about losing money than it is to feel good about making it. It is a phenomenon referred to as "loss aversion," where the pain of losing money feels roughly twice as strong as the joy felt in winning the same amount.

Investors who entered the week heavily concentrated in growth stocks are likely feeling the recent volatility more acutely than investors with broader equity exposure. That is precisely where diversification proves its worth.

The Russell 3000 Value Index was up 0.5% this week and remained comfortably above its 50-day moving average. Likewise, several defensive sectors substantially outperformed the broader market. Exposure to those areas would have cushioned the decline, with the degree of protection depending on each investor's allocation.

The objective isn't to avoid every decline. It is to avoid relying on a single investment style, sector, or market theme. When leadership rotates—as it inevitably does—strength in one area can offset weakness in another.

Diversified equity portfolios rarely eliminate declines, but they often reduce the damage when market leadership changes. Leadership rotation is one of the stock market's defining characteristics. Few investors can consistently predict those rotations correctly, which is precisely why diversification remains valuable.

Briefing.com Analyst Insight

Diversification within equities, however, extends beyond growth and value. It also includes exposure across sectors, industries, market capitalizations, and investment styles, all of which respond differently as economic conditions evolve.

Earnings expectations change. Interest rates fluctuate. Valuations expand and contract. Leadership changes with them.

Diversification within an equity portfolio cannot eliminate market risk, but it can reduce company-, industry-, and style-specific risks while positioning investors to benefit as leadership broadens over time.

For active investors, diversification should not be viewed as settling for average returns. It should be viewed as risk management that preserves the flexibility to capitalize as sentiment shifts, economic conditions evolve, and market leadership changes, because it always does.

--Patrick J. O'Hare, Briefing.com

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