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Wednesday 11 September 2024 by Jonathan Sheridan

The benefits of diversification in 2024

Continuing the theme of diversification from last edition’s article, here we focus on the benefits of diversification and why creating a more diversified portfolio helps mitigate risk in your fixed income portfolio.

Why diversify your portfolio?

A number of investors construct portfolios consisting of relatively few bonds. This is a strategy which, at times, can produce apparently high returns (and is also called a concentrated portfolio) but will likely result in an unobservable and outsized risk that may not become apparent until after a major correction event has already occurred.

The major reason to diversify your holdings comes out of a number of years of academic research that revealed the more you diversify your holdings the less likely you are to experience sell-offs in all of your investments simultaneously. This is explained by the existence of “specific risks” or “unsystematic risks” in investment markets.

Specific risks are risks that are not inherent in investing in markets generally but instead are attached to one particular company or investment and so these risks can be minimised via the use of diversification. However, “market risks” or “systematic risks” are those risks that come with investing in any asset market and so cannot be diversified away – they are risks inherent to any kind of investing.

There are company, industry, and economic (or political) risks to consider, amongst a variety of others, for any investor who has the opportunity to access international markets. Here are a few examples of each type demonstrating why an investor might experience a hidden specific risk that could cause a fall in a bond’s price:

Company risk: A manufacturer experiences a fire at one of its factories which stops production and causes a fall in their revenues, increasing their credit risk. A company makes an ill-advised investment that generates losses for their business which also increases their credit risk.

Industry risk: The price of iron ore falls which impacts all iron ore-producing companies as revenues drop alongside the commodity’s price reduction. An industry becomes technologically obsolete due to a better and cheaper alternative being invented (e.g. traditional film versus digital cameras).

Economic (or political) risk: A country experiences a broad recession which causes customers to spend less money at most companies based inside that country. A country’s government decides to increase corporate tax rates across the board which reduces the profitability of all companies in the country.

Importantly, you can reduce each of those specific risks by diversifying your holdings across one (or more) of those categories (e.g. by buying US bonds to avoid Australian political risk and vice versa). The more the investments vary across different categories, the more efficiently you can reduce specific risks.

If you own bonds in two companies in the same industry for instance you will no longer be fully exposed to the risk of one company having a specific risk occur. However, if you own bonds in two different companies across two different industries in two different countries, you will no longer be fully exposed to industry risk, company risk, or political risk.

Each additional diversifying bond will reduce your exposure to one or more risks, with the greatest benefit achieved early on as you add your first few bonds. Two equal-sized bonds will reduce any individual exposure to 50%, three equal-sized bonds will reduce the exposure to 33%, and four equal-sized bonds will reduce the exposure to 25%. Therefore, investors can be rewarded very quickly for even a small effort at diversification.

Better diversification, better long-term performance

An extra benefit of diversification is that you tend to not only reduce the risk in your portfolio but also actually improve the overall long-term performance as a result.

You might expect that creating the optimal portfolio (defined as the portfolio that offers the highest expected level of return for a specific level of risk) would normally require diversification across a variety of bonds.

Logically it makes sense that the wider your universe of possible investment, the better your chance is to find the best possible return for your preferred level of risk. Such diversification within bonds might include looking across investment grade bonds, high-yield bonds, inflation-linked bonds, hybrids, government bonds, corporate bonds, and foreign currency bonds.

This theory was first introduced in 1952 by the Nobel Prize for Economics winner, Harry Markowitz, who concluded (and supported by decades of financial research since) that diversification improves returns and lowers risk. This research demonstrated that the greater the variety of assets (including bonds) that are held within portfolios, the likelier an investor is to achieve an optimal portfolio at any given level of risk, the so-called ‘efficient frontier’. This efficient frontier provides a set of all optimal portfolios for different levels of risk that an investor might want to consider, whether that is low, medium, or high risk in nature.

In financial research, this risk is typically measured or defined as the volatility of a security or portfolio.

Conclusion

As we discuss in this article, a better diversified portfolio through the inclusion of bonds, can smooth out volatility, improve returns, and lower risk. With ongoing economic and market uncertainty, a well-constructed portfolio with a healthy level of diversification will achieve optimal outcomes. Please speak with a FIIG Relationship Manager to find out more.