Charlie Munger’s speech Investment Practices of Leading Charitable Foundations, given at a meeting of the Foundation Financial Officers Group in Santa Monica, California, is often remembered for its criticism of excessive investment fees and unnecessary complexity. The speech also touches upon another widely-accepted investing practice he challenges: diversification.
The problem with diversification as dogma
Diversification is considered a cornerstone of prudent portfolio management, and for most investors, it serves an important purpose: don’t put all your eggs in one basket. And for decades, investors were taught that spreading money across as many businesses, sectors and geographies was the safest way to build long-term wealth. Munger felt differently.
The enduring lesson…
Munger's views on diversification are often reduced to the headline that investors should own only a handful of stocks. That misses the deeper lesson. He wasn't advocating concentration for everyone. He was challenging investors to think more carefully about why they diversify in the first place. Yes, diversification can help reduce setbacks from being wrong. But it cannot pay for poor investment decisions, nor does it automatically improve returns. Beyond a certain point, adding more holdings may simply dilute the impact of your holdings. The enduring lesson is not that diversification is bad, it’s that every investment in a portfolio should have earned its place - simply owning more businesses does not make an investor safer or wealthier.
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