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DIVERSIFICATION
1. Diversification
2. Reasons to diversify
3. Diversification & risk
4. Balancing your portfolio
5. The right diversification strategy
6. Choosing individual investments
7. Diversification tips
 
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Diversification & risk

If you diversify, you may be able to protect your portfolio against some of the risks of investing without giving up the level of long-term return that you're seeking.

That's possible because different subclasses within an asset class carry different levels of risk — sometimes referred to as risk-to-return profiles. If you select different investments within a number of subclasses, your portfolio of investments, as a group, can balance, or offset, the risk that any one investment might pose individually.

For example, the possibility of frequent or sudden changes in the value of a small-company stock might make it a risky investment if that stock makes up a large percentage of your portfolio. But if your portfolio also includes blue chip stocks, the picture changes.

That's because the generally greater stability of the blue chips can help your portfolio maintain its value even if the small-company stock takes a nosedive but the stock markets overall are strong. At the same time, the growth potential of the small-company stock can help balance the typically slower growth of the blue chips.

Remember, the more narrowly focused your investments, the less diversified you are. And that can leave your portfolio more vulnerable to sudden swings in value — and increase your risk for significant losses.


 

         
   
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