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The diversification illusion: why 'balanced' portfolios may be exposed

Diversification is one of investing’s oldest principles—and, arguably, one of its most misunderstood.

Most client portfolios today appear well diversified. They span regions, sectors, and often include multiple managers and strategies. On the surface, they look balanced.

But appearances can be misleading.

Look beneath the labels, and many portfolios are still driven by a relatively narrow set of underlying forces. That distinction—between how a portfolio looks and how it behaves—has become increasingly important.

When diversification fails, it tends to fail together

At its core, diversification is straightforward: combine exposures that behave differently, so that when one part of a portfolio struggles, another can help offset it.

In practice, that’s becoming harder to achieve.

Global equity indices—now widely used as portfolio building blocks—have become increasingly concentrated. A significant portion of market capitalisation sits in a small group of US mega-cap companies, with a strong bias towards growth and technology.

By the end of 2025, the US made up roughly two-thirds of the MSCI All Country World Index, with the so-called AI-Eight (Nvidia, Microsoft, Amazon, Meta, Broadcom, Alphabet, Oracle and Palantir), alone representing close to 18.5% of the index. Other indices, such as the MSCI World or FTSE World Index, are even more concentrated.

But that concentration isn’t always obvious in portfolios.

An investor may hold hundreds of securities through index funds and still find that outcomes are largely driven by the same factors: US growth, large-cap technology, and momentum.

The result is a portfolio that looks diversified but behaves more like a concentrated exposure.

The risk of unconscious concentration

Importantly, this is not typically a deliberate decision. It is structural.

Passive investing allocates capital in proportion to market size. As companies perform well, their weights increase, which further amplifies their influence on portfolio outcomes.

Over time, portfolios can become heavily exposed to a narrow part of the market—without any explicit intention to do so.

That would be less concerning if valuations were unremarkable. But today, much of this concentration sits in areas where valuations are elevated by historical standards.

Across a range of long-term measures, global equities are trading at levels that have, in the past, been associated with more modest forward returns.

In other words, portfolios may be most exposed at precisely the point they feel most comfortable.

Diversification in form versus diversification in function

For advisers, the key question is not how many holdings are in a portfolio, but how those holdings behave.

Owning multiple funds or strategies does not necessarily result in diversification if they are driven by the same underlying factors.

True diversification is about behaviour.

It involves combining exposures that respond differently to changes in economic conditions, market regimes, and investor sentiment—across geographies, sectors, currencies, and investment styles.

Without that, diversification can become largely cosmetic.

This distinction tends to matter most when conditions change. When leadership narrows—or begins to reverse—portfolios built on the same drivers often move together.

For advisers, this raises a practical consideration: diversification should be assessed not just by allocation, but by underlying drivers of return.

Looking beyond the obvious

Where, then, can genuine diversification be found?

Part of the answer may lie in looking beyond the areas that have performed best in recent years.

Non-US markets, for example, currently trade at more modest valuations relative to the US. While US shares trade on average at around 38 times earnings, developed markets ex-US and emerging markets change hands at roughly 20 and 16 times respectively. In many cases, they offer exposure to businesses with sound fundamentals that have simply fallen out of favour.   

Balancing investment styles can also help. Growth has led markets for much of the past decade, but leadership between growth and value has historically moved in cycles.

Value-oriented opportunities, while less prominent in recent years, may provide differentiated outcomes if conditions shift.

Currencies are another, often overlooked, dimension. Exposure beyond the US dollar can introduce an additional source of return, which may behave differently from underlying equity markets.

Taken together, these exposures can broaden the drivers of return within a portfolio—but only if they are introduced deliberately rather than by default.

The role of active decisions

None of this suggests that passive investing has no role to play.

But it does highlight its limitations in the context of diversification.

Index strategies, by design, reflect the market as it exists today. They do not adjust for concentration or valuation risk.

Introducing deliberate, valuation-aware exposures—whether through active strategies or targeted allocations—can help broaden the drivers of return and reduce reliance on a single market narrative.

The key is not activity for its own sake, but intentional differentiation.

For advisers, the challenge is not simply to build portfolios that appear diversified, but to ensure they are.

Because diversification is not about owning more.

It is about owning differently.

And in practice, that difference tends to matter most when it is tested.

CTA

Explore how valuation-driven investing can improve portfolio diversification and resilience in today’s concentrated markets in our latest white paper (for advisers): https://www.orbis.com/au/adviser/global-20-rethinking-genuine-diversification?utm_source=firstlninks&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=global20&utm_content=campaignlandingpage

 

Werner (Vern) du Preez is an Investment Specialist at Orbis Investments, a sponsor of Firstlinks. This article is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, or other professional advice. The content is not tailored to the specific investment objectives, financial situation, or needs of any individual. Investors should not rely solely on this information in making investment decisions. We do not accept liability for any loss or damage, including without limitation to, any loss of profit, which may arise directly or indirectly from the use of or reliance on such information. This information is at a point in time and the Orbis Funds may take a different view depending on changing facts and circumstances. The value of investments in the Orbis Funds may fall as well as rise and you may get back less than you originally invested.

For more articles and papers from Orbis, please click here.

 

  •   1 April 2026
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