The Risk of Concentrating Wealth in a Single Asset

Last updated 2022-04-29.

Confidence: Highly likely.

Some people hold most or all of their wealth in a single asset. A few examples of common situations where people do this:

  • Alice works at Google. A large chunk of her compensation comes in the form of Google stock.

  • Bob bought bitcoin a few years ago and the price went up a lot. Now, bitcoin accounts for 50% of his net worth.

  • Carol used her retirement money to buy a second house, and she earns income by renting it out.

This is usually a bad idea, and you should go to great lengths to avoid it. It’s bad even if you have high risk tolerance, because you can get a better expected return by building a diversified portfolio and then adding leverage.

Key points

  • On average, an individual stock provides the same expected return as the total stock market, but with 2-3 times as much risk. You could apply leverage to a total stock market index and get 2-3 times the expected return for the same level of risk as an individual stock. Or you could add leverage to the global market portfolio and get 3-4 times the expected return. [More]

  • The same principle applies to other types of individual assets, such as private company stock, rental properties, and cryptocurrency. [More]

  • If you hold a lot of money in a single asset and want to diversify, you may have to pay capital gains tax when you sell. The diversification benefits probably overcome the tax hit after about 3-10 years. [More]

  • You can reduce taxes by donating to charity, or by putting the money in a donor-advised fund or a foundation. [More]

  • If you’re a major stakeholder in an asset, you might depress the price by selling. You can reduce your market impact by selling slowly, or by paying your broker to manage the sale for you. [More]

  • An exception: Altruistic investors don’t just care about their own investments, but about the overall altruistic portfolio. If you hold an individual asset that other altruists can’t hold, such as equity in a private company, it might make sense to keep it. [More]

  • If the effective altruism community holds on the order of $30 billion in overly concentrated investments, then diversifying these funds could be worth as much as $1 billion in additional donations per year. [More]

Note: In this essay, I make some illustrations using historical market data. Future market behavior will probably look different, so the exact numbers I use won’t apply. But I expect the basic principles to remain true in the future.

Disclaimer: I am not an investment advisor and this should not be taken as investment advice.

A primer on risk

All else equal, investors prefer to reduce risk. We normally measure risk in terms of standard deviation: if asset A has twice the standard deviation of asset B, then A is twice as risky.[1]

An investor who wants to increase risk can apply leverage: borrowing money to invest. This amplifies the expected return and standard deviation of their portfolio. Specifically, both quantities increase in proportion to the amount of leverage used.[2] For example, using 3:1 leverage—borrowing money until you have 3x as much as you started with—would triple the expected return (minus the cost of leverage) and triple the standard deviation.

If we can freely use leverage,[3] we don’t care about an asset’s return or standard deviation. What we care about is the Sharpe ratio: the expected return minus the risk-free rate, divided by the standard deviation. If we want to take on greater risk, we can add leverage to increase both the return and the volatility. If we think our portfolio is too risky, we can mix in some T-bills. Either way, the Sharpe ratio stays the same.[4]

Therefore, when comparing investment choices, we should focus on the Sharpe ratios. In theory, we should invest in whatever portfolio has the highest Sharpe ratio, and then add leverage or mix in T-bills to hit the desired level of risk (although we can’t always do this due to practical constraints). As we will see in the next two sections, we can expect a well-diversified global portfolio to provide a higher Sharpe ratio than almost any individual asset.

How risky are individual stocks?

I couldn’t find any published research on the standard deviations of individual stocks. So I did my own analysis.

Using the Center for Research in Security Prices (CRSP) data set, I calculated the month-to-month standard deviation of every US stock from 1960 to 2015.

I divided stocks into categories by market capitalization, and calculated the average stock’s standard deviation within each category. I defined the categories as follows:

  • Micro-caps: smallest 40% of stocks

  • Small-caps: 40th to 70th percentile

  • Mid-caps: 70th to 90th percentile

  • Large-caps: 90th to 99th percentile

  • Mega-caps: 99th percentile and above

This table gives the average volatility of stocks within each category, and the market cap of the smallest stock in the category as of 2015.

Standard Deviation Min Size
Micro 64% $0[5]
Small 48% $310M
Mid 42% $1.6B
Large 40% $8.3B
Mega 27% $75B

This graph shows the standard deviation by market cap of stocks from 1995 to 2015:[6]

The US stock market has historically had a standard deviation of about 16%. By comparing to the data above, we can see that large-cap stocks experienced about double the volatility of the total market, and small-caps had triple the volatility. Mega-caps were more stable than other stocks, but still showed greater volatility than the total market.

We can corroborate this finding by looking at CBOE volatility indexes. These provide the market’s best guess as to the future volatility of various assets. The VIX gives the projected volatility of the S&P 500; VXAZN, VXAPL, VXGS, VXGOG, and VXIBM project the volatilities of five select stocks (Amazon, Apple, Goldman Sachs, Google, and IBM, respectively). The exact relationships vary over time, but usually, the individual-stock volatility indexes are about twice as high as the VIX.

So far, we’ve seen that the US stock market as a whole is much less volatile than an individual stock. But it’s usually not a good idea to invest only in US stocks. We can reduce volatility even lower by investing in the global market portfolio (GMP). How does individual-stock volatility compare to the GMP?

We can compare the US stock market to a fully diversified portfolio using data from Meb Faber’s book, Global Asset Allocation. The book reports performance from 1973 to 2013:

T-Bills US Large-Cap GMP
Return 5.3% 10.2% 9.9%
Standard Deviation 1.0% 15.6% 8.5%
Sharpe Ratio 0 0.32 0.55

US large-cap stocks (think the S&P 500) had a Sharpe ratio of 0.32. The global market portfolio—which includes global stocks, bonds, and real assets—had a Sharpe ratio nearly twice as high, at 0.55.[7] Putting this together with the data on individual-stock volatility tells us that individual large-cap stocks were three to four times as risky as GMP, without a meaningfully higher return to compensate. Small-cap stocks were even riskier, although small-caps also tended to earn higher returns, so they had comparable Sharpe ratios to large-caps.

Individual large-cap stocks on average had only 13 the Sharpe ratio of the GMP. What does that mean in practical terms?

Suppose it’s 1973, and you’re comfortable with a lot of risk—your target is a 30% standard deviation. You could put all your money in a single stock (like Exxon or IBM) and earn a 10% average return over the next 40 years. Or you could buy the GMP, lever it up 3:1, and earn 19% after fees.[8] If you invest $100 in the single stock, you will have $4,500 by the end of 2013.[9] That same $100 in the global market portfolio will turn into $114,000.

Assets other than stocks

The same basic principle applies for single assets other than publicly-traded stock, such as houses, cryptocurrencies, or private equity. Individual assets are far more volatile than the global market portfolio.[10]

We don’t really know how volatile individual house prices are, because most houses only get bought or sold once every few years. There’s mixed evidence on how well the aggregate real estate market performs compared to the stock market, but my best guess is real estate performs as well or worse than equities after adjusting for risk. And buying a single property brings idiosyncratic risks, such as property damage or changes in demand in that particular city (or even neighborhood).

(This is not to say it’s a bad idea to buy a house if you want to live in it. I’m specifically talking about buying real estate as an investment.)

We do know how volatile cryptocurrencies are: they’re a lot more volatile than individual stocks.[11] So far, bitcoin has justified its volatility with high returns: from 2012 to the end of 2019, it had a Sharpe ratio of 4.1, far higher than that of the global market portfolio. If you expect it to continue returning an average of 300% per year, as it has since 2012, then it might be a good investment. But that’s a pretty bold expectation, and I wouldn’t count on it.[12]

On the subject of private equity, there’s some evidence that venture capital firms outperform public markets.[13] But this outperformance comes with greater risk: three quarters of entrepreneurs end up with nothing. After adjusting for risk, startup founders on average earn less than they would at a salaried job.[14]

The impact of taxes

Suppose you have a lot of money in a single stock, and you want to diversify. But if you sell, you’ll have to pay tax on the capital gains. How much does that matter?

As of 2020, most people in the United States have to pay 15% tax on capital gains. People in the top tax bracket have to pay 20%. Additionally, you may have to pay more if your state charges capital gains taxes. California residents in the top tax bracket have to pay 13.3% in state capital gains tax, for a total of 33.3%. (Apologies to readers outside the US; I don’t know how your taxes work.)

Let’s compare two hypothetical options:

  1. Keep holding the single stock, earning an expected 10% return without paying taxes.

  2. Sell the stock, pay capital gains tax, and invest in the global market portfolio with 3:1 leverage.

If you invest for long enough, option 2 will earn enough (in expectation) to overcome the cost of paying taxes. At a 15% tax rate, this only takes 1.9 years (in expectation). At a 33.3% rate, it takes 4.7 years. If you’re a long-term investor, it looks appealing to take the tax hit in exchange for higher expected return.[15]

But most people probably don’t want 3:1 leverage. What if you invest at, say, 1.6:1 leverage instead? With that amount of leverage, the global market portfolio historically had about the same volatility as the (unlevered) S&P 500.

Before we can answer which option is better, we have to resolve a problem. The GMP with 1.6:1 leverage has lower risk than a single stock, so just looking at the return doesn’t fully capture why we prefer the GMP. How can we compare them?

The solution is to use certainty-equivalent interest rates. If you want 1.6:1 leverage on the global market portfolio, then your certainty-equivalent interest rate is 9.1% (calculated using historical data from 1973 to 2013).[16] That means you’re indifferent between holding the GMP at 1.6:1 leverage and holding an asset that pays out a guaranteed 9.1% per year—which, at the 1973-2013 average risk-free rate of 5.3%, gives an excess return of 3.8% over the risk-free rate. (The risk-free rate today is much lower, so the forward-looking certainty-equivalent interest rate would be lower, too. The 9.1% figure only applies historically.)

Historically, an individual stock had a certainty-equivalent interest rate of 5.4% (0.1% plus the historical risk-free rate of 5.3%). Therefore, holding the GMP rather than the single stock was as good as a guaranteed 3.7% annual return (= 9.1% – 5.4%, or 3.8% – 0.1% if you exclude the risk-free rate). At a 3.7% interest rate, it takes 4.4 years to make up for a 15% capital gains tax, and 11.1 years to recover from a 33.3% tax. 11.1 years is a long time, but many investors have longer time horizons than that.

Reducing taxes by donating

If you ultimately plan to donate your savings, you can do three main things to reduce your tax burden:

  1. Donate your stock immediately instead of selling it.

  2. Put your stock in a donor-advised fund (DAF).

  3. Set up a foundation.

The first option makes sense if you want to donate now. If you want to donate later rather than now, then it doesn’t work for you. But you might still be able to put your stock in a DAF. You can deduct donations to a DAF, and assets you hold inside a DAF don’t incur capital gains tax. But DAFs have three important downsides:

  1. DAFs can only disburse funds to legally registered charities.

  2. DAFs charge fees, usually 0.6% per year.

  3. DAFs typically only let you invest in a few select mutual funds.

The annual fee means the longer you hold money in a DAF, the more money you lose to the fee. But if you keep your money in a taxable account, you have to pay taxes on dividends, which might cost you more than 0.6% anyway—in which case the DAF performs better by avoiding those taxes.

DAFs usually only allow you to invest in a dozen or so pre-selected mutual funds. You can use the available funds to construct a portfolio of global stocks and bonds, but you might not be able to buy alternative assets like gold. And if you want to do something more sophisticated like leverage or mission hedging, you’re probably out of luck.

If you set up a foundation to hold your money, then the foundation is free to invest however you’d like. But foundations have relatively high fixed costs, so it probably only makes sense to create one if you want to donate a lot of money—perhaps somewhere around $10 million. (I don’t know much about foundations, that’s just my order-of-magnitude guess after reading a few articles about how they work.)

But be aware that US donors can only deduct 30% of their adjusted gross income (AGI) when donating appreciated securities. For example, if your income is $100,000, then you can’t deduct more than $30,000 worth of stock. If you donate more than that (including by putting it in a DAF), then you only get to deduct the first $30,000. Foundations have stricter limits—donors can only deduct 20% of AGI when donating to a foundation. Under some circumstances, it might still make sense to make a non-deductible contribution to a DAF, because any assets inside the DAF will not incur taxes if they gain value.

Much more could be said about how DAFs and foundations work. This section is just meant to provide a starting point. I am by no means an expert on taxes; if you plan on incurring a large capital gain, you should first talk to a tax professional.

Major stakeholders care about market impact

If you’re a major stakeholder in an asset, e.g., if you hold a significant fraction of the stock in a publicly-traded company, then you might not want to sell all your holdings at once. If you try to sell too quickly, that pushes down the price, and you end up selling at a substantial discount. That’s not good.

You can still sell large holdings as long as you’re careful. Most brokerage firms can assist large investors with making transactions (for example, Fidelity’s active trader services). Interactive Brokers has an automated algorithm to do this (called accumulate/​distribute); I don’t know much about it personally, but an investment professional I trust told me that it works well.

Investors who want to make their own trades can use a simple approach to reduce their market impact (although this probably isn’t sufficient for truly large transactions):

  1. Use limit orders, not market orders.

  2. When putting in a sell order, only slightly undercut the current best offer.

  3. Be patient. Be willing to wait several days to finish trading.[17]

Possible exceptions

In general, it’s not a good idea to hold most of your net worth in a single asset. There is at least one exception: if you’re an altruistic investor and you hold an asset that few other altruists own.

Self-interested people only care about how much money they have, but altruists care about how much money all other (value-aligned) altruists have. As an altruist, rather than focusing on your personal portfolio, you want to optimize the overall altruistic portfolio.

In some situations, it might make sense to hold most of your money in a single asset. For example, if you’re a founder or employee at a small private company, you might be the only value-aligned altruist who can hold equity in that company. In that case, you might prefer to hold on to that equity instead of selling. Even though your personal portfolio is highly concentrated, you’re actually diversifying the overall altruistic portfolio by investing in an asset when nobody else can (as long as your holding doesn’t represent too large a percentage of the altruistic portfolio).

As far as I know, that’s the only situation where concentrating your investments in one asset can actually reduce risk. But there are some other situations where you might be willing to accept concentration risk in exchange for some other benefit. For example:

  1. You put most of your wealth in a house because you want to own your own home.

  2. You’re the founder of a company, and you want to control a majority of the voting shares.

Sometimes, considerations like these might matter enough to outweigh the extra risk. But people usually underestimate the risk involved in concentrating their wealth, and they should diversify more often than they do.

Expected value of diversifying

The effective altruism community probably has on the order of $30 billion in concentrated investments. If we collectively shifted all this money toward a globally diversified portfolio, historically that would have been worth a certainty-equivalent 3.7% return, or just over $1 billion per year. Of course, these numbers are rough estimates. And a lot of funds are probably concentrated in US equities, which isn’t ideal but still isn’t as bad as holding just a single stock. Ultimately, it seems likely that diversifying the collective effective altruist portfolio could be worth $500 million or more per year in extra donations.

Acknowledgements

Thanks to Peter Hurford, David Reinstein, and Gavin Taylor for reviewing drafts of this essay.

Changelog

2022-04-20:

  • Update expected value of diversifying based on how EA funding has grown.

  • Improve the standard deviation by market cap chart to be more readable.

  • Update footnote to reflect the changes to the aforementioned chart.

2022-04-29: Update “Key points” to reflect the changes from 2022-04-20.

Notes


  1. ↩︎

    William Bernstein’s short book Deep Risk explains how to think about risk beyond just standard deviation. He defines “deep risk” as the risk of permanent loss of capital.

    Individual assets carry much greater deep risk than diversified portfolios because they’re much more likely to go to $0. But it’s hard to quantify how much this matters. For the purposes of this essay, we will use standard deviation as the measure of risk because it’s easy to reason about while still doing a decent job of capturing what we mean by “risk”.

  2. ↩︎

    Technically, mean return doesn’t increase in proportion to the amount of leverage. It increases in proportion to the amount of leverage minus the cost of leverage. If the cost of leverage equals the risk-free rate, then increasing leverage by a factor of N increases the return in excess of the risk-free rate by a factor of N.

    As of this writing, risk-free rates are close to zero, so it’s reasonable to ignore the risk-free rate when making rough estimates. As we will see later in this essay, the risk-free rate used to be much higher, so we need to account for it when looking at historical market behavior.

  3. ↩︎

    Theoretical models assume investors can use however much leverage they want, and only have to pay the risk-free rate. That’s not true in practice, but sophisticated investors can usually get leverage without having to pay too much. In Should Altruists Leverage Investments?, Brian Tomasik reviews a few methods for applying leverage. I personally get leverage via a margin loan from Interactive Brokers, although this might not be best for everyone.

  4. ↩︎

    Again, this isn’t true in practice, because you probably have to pay more than the risk-free rate to get leverage. So adding leverage usually decreases the Sharpe ratio by a bit.

  5. ↩︎

    $0 is the lower bound on how small a micro-cap can be. In 2015, the smallest publicly-traded company was valued at a little under $100,000.

  6. ↩︎

    This graph includes 20 data points, where each point shows the average standard deviation for stocks in a given market cap range. All ranges are equally sized on a log scale (each range includes market caps between 2^n and 2^(n+1) for some value of n). For this graph, I included data from 1995-2015 instead of 1960-2015 to avoid concerns around market cap growth over time. A more rigorous analysis would still adjust for market cap growth, so this graph shouldn’t be considered entirely accurate, but it’s reasonably close. I didn’t try to make this adjustment because it’s not entirely obvious what the proper way to do it is.

    Technically, the x-axis labels are wrong because they label ranges starting with a power of 2, e.g., the point labeled “100K” includes all stocks with a market cap between $131,072 (2^17) and $262,144 (2^18).

  7. ↩︎

    Bonds performed unusually well from 1973 to 2013 (compared to their average performance over the past two centuries), which means we can probably expect a worse return from the global market portfolio going forward. But US stocks also performed unusually well over this period. We can’t say how exactly the relationship between these two portfolios will change in the future, but we have good theoretical and empirical reasons to expect the global market portfolio to perform better on a risk-adjusted basis than the US stock market.

    (The good performance of bonds is somewhat accounted for by a high risk-free rate, which we subtract out of return when calculating the Sharpe ratio.)

  8. ↩︎

    This assumes you pay the risk-free rate as a cost of leverage. If you pay the risk-free rate plus 0.5% (which is what Interactive Brokers charges for large account holders), you’d make 18% instead of 19%.

  9. ↩︎

    That’s how much you would have on average. In actuality, you probably would have done much better or much worse. Many public companies went bankrupt over the period. But you might have gotten lucky and picked one of the big winners.

  10. ↩︎

    Government bonds are an exception to this. Arguably, gold is an exception as well, depending on what “far more volatile” means. Gold is riskier than the global market portfolio, but probably less than twice as risky. Another possible exception is Berkshire Hathaway. But there aren’t many exceptions.

  11. ↩︎

    The linked web page gives implied daily volatility instead of annual. Multiply it by the square root of 365 to get the implied annual standard deviation.

  12. ↩︎

    On the other hand, I thought bitcoin was a bad investment back in 2011, so what do I know.

  13. ↩︎

    Cambridge Associates (2018). US Venture Capital Index and Selected Benchmark Statistics.

  14. ↩︎
  15. ↩︎

    Technically, you actually don’t care about the expected number of years until you have more money with option 2. What you care about is the expected number of years until you have more utility of money. We can calculate this using certainty-equivalent interest rates, which I will do later in this section.

  16. ↩︎

    I derived this number as follows:

    1. Assume an isoelastic utility function with a relative risk aversion coefficient of 4.

    2. Using Merton’s formula from Lifetime Portfolio Selectin Under Uncertainty: The Continuous-Time Case (1969), this gives optimal leverage of 1.6:1.

    3. Calculate expected utility of the GMP at 1.6:1 leverage.

    4. Invert the utility function to find the constant interest rate that provides that much utility.

    Calculations were performed using leverage.py.

    As a side note, it seems unlikely to me that altruistic investors would want to use a relative risk aversion coefficient of 4. Another way we might decide to use 1.6:1 leverage by making more pessimistic assumptions about future return.

  17. ↩︎

    The longer you wait, the greater volatility your holdings might experience. There’s a theoretical model that defines how to trade off transaction costs vs. volatility risk: see Almgren & Chriss (2000), Optimal Execution of Portfolio Transactions.