Key Takeaways
  • The S&P 500's top 10 stocks now represent 37% of the entire index — the highest concentration in modern market history.
  • Holding multiple funds tracking the same large-cap universe doesn't reduce risk. In 2022, these "different" funds moved almost identically with correlations above 0.95.
  • Real diversification means owning things that behave differently — across asset classes, geographies, and styles.
  • Owning assets that aren't currently winning is uncomfortable. That discomfort is precisely what diversification is supposed to feel like.

The Number That Should Make You Uncomfortable

37%

of the S&P 500 is concentrated in just 10 stocks — up from 18% fifteen years ago. If you own an S&P 500 index fund, a large-cap growth fund, and a Nasdaq ETF, you likely hold Apple, Microsoft, NVIDIA, Amazon, and Meta in all three.

You don't have three investments. You have one bet wearing three outfits.

This Isn't Theory. It Already Happened.

In 2022, inflation spiked and interest rates rose sharply. Portfolios that looked diversified on paper fell almost in lockstep — because underneath the labels, they were all making the same bet on mega-cap growth.

What You Held What You Expected 2022 Actual Return
S&P 500 Index Fund "Broad market exposure" −19.4%
Large-Cap Growth Fund "Different strategy" −29.1%
Tech Sector ETF "Sector diversification" −33.1%
All Three Combined "I'm diversified" All moved together
The Correlation Problem The correlation between these "different" funds during the 2022 drawdown was above 0.95 — meaning they behaved almost identically when it mattered most. Diversification that fails in a downturn isn't diversification at all.

The Dinner Table Test

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You're at dinner. Five people order five different dishes. Looks like variety. But every dish was made with the same ingredient. If that ingredient is spoiled — every plate is ruined. That's what a concentrated portfolio looks like in a downturn.

What Real Diversification Actually Looks Like

It's not about how many things you own. It's about how differently they behave.

Diversification Factor The Question to Ask Yourself
Asset Class Do I own anything beyond stocks and bonds? (Real assets, alternatives, commodities)
Geography Am I betting everything on the U.S.? International markets don't always move in lockstep.
Style Am I all-in on growth? Value stocks outperformed growth by +22% in 2022.
Correlation When my biggest holding drops 20%, does everything else drop too?

The "Lost Decade" — A Case for Geographic Diversification

+154%

Emerging markets returned +154% from 2000–2009 while the S&P 500 returned −9.1% over the same decade. Geography matters. A U.S.-only portfolio isn't diversified — it's a single-country bet.

Market 2000–2009 Total Return
S&P 500 (U.S.) −9.1%
International Developed +17.5%
Emerging Markets +154%

The Uncomfortable Truth

Real diversification means owning things that aren't currently winning. That's hard. When mega-cap tech is up 40% in a year, holding international value stocks or commodities that are flat feels like dead weight. The temptation is to sell what's lagging and pile into what's hot.

That impulse — concentrating into whatever just worked — is exactly the risk diversification protects you from.

The Pattern Repeats

Era The "Sure Thing" What Happened Next
1970s Nifty Fifty blue chips Crashed 50%+ in the 1973–74 bear market
1980s Japanese stocks Nikkei fell 80% after 1989 — still hasn't fully recovered
Late 1990s Dot-com tech stocks Nasdaq fell −78% from peak to trough
Mid 2000s Financials & real estate 2008 financial crisis wiped out the sector
2020s Mega-cap U.S. tech? TBD — but the concentration is historically extreme

Every generation has its "this time is different" trade. The point isn't to predict which one breaks — it's to make sure you're not all-in when it does.


What We Do Differently at GKWM

X-ray every portfolio We look past fund names to the actual underlying exposures — so you know what you truly own, not just what it says on the label.
Measure real correlation Not what holdings are, but how they actually behave together. Two funds with different names that move in lockstep aren't diversification.
Stress-test against history How would this portfolio have performed in 2000? 2008? 2022? We build portfolios designed to hold up across a range of environments, not just the recent one.
Rebalance with discipline Trimming winners and adding to laggards isn't exciting — but it systematically enforces diversification and is one of the few things in investing that actually works.

The goal isn't to own the most funds. It's to own the right mix — one that holds up no matter what the market throws at us.

One Question to Ask Yourself Today

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Pull up your portfolio. Look at the top 10 holdings across all your funds combined. Then ask: Am I truly diversified? Or am I just holding different names of the same risk?

If the same companies keep showing up — or if you're not sure — that's exactly the conversation we're here for.

Schedule a Portfolio Review →

For investors in Reno, Sparks, Carson City, and the broader Lake Tahoe region, this matters especially at year-end and during major market shifts — when the temptation to chase recent winners is highest and a disciplined, locally-accountable advisor makes the biggest difference. At GK Wealth Management, we work with business owners and families throughout Northern Nevada who have accumulated significant wealth and need a portfolio built to last through multiple market cycles, not just the most recent one.

The Bottom Line

Concentration looks like genius on the way up and catastrophe on the way down. A truly diversified portfolio means owning things that aren't all winning at the same time. That discomfort is the strategy working — not failing.

— Teddy Bakhos, CIO  |  GK Wealth Management