Diversification and Rebalancing

Diversification and Rebalancing

Learning Center > Investing Strategy > Diversification And Rebalancing

Diversification and rebalancing are very important parts of investing. In order to stay diversified, you need to rebalance.

Diversification means diversifying (or spreading out) your stocks across different sectors, asset classes, or more. Maybe you’ve heard of the saying: don’t put all of your eggs in one basket? Well, this especially applies to investing. I recommend staying away from individual stocks and sticking to ETFs because you get more diversification with them. If one of the companies in the S&P 500 ETF went out of business, your holdings would barely be affected. Even if fifty of the stocks in the S&P 500 ETF went out of business, it still wouldn’t be too big of a deal.

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I recommend ETFs for any portfolio because they minimize the amount of risk while still keeping great returns.

Diversification is critical, so it’s important to maintain it. Rebalancing is how you do this. On a fixed schedule, you sell part of the winners and buy more of the losers. This is important because just because something is doing well now doesn’t mean it’ll always do well. Historically speaking, things that are doing very well now will at some point do very badly.

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The Three Most Important Metrics

The Three Most Important Metrics

Understanding the metrics of investing is very important because this is how investors do research. Maybe you’re wondering what a metric is. Well, they’re just the measurements that can tell you about the stock. If you’re looking at a pokemon card, the metrics would be the HP and the damage. 

There are a lot of metrics that financial analysts look at to determine every aspect of a stock but we’re just going to look at the basic ones here. We’ll discuss the three most important ones. Also, remember that you don’t have to actually calculate these yourself. There are plenty of websites that can show you all of these metrics

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  1. Price to earnings ratio (P.E ratio): this is the companies share price divided by the earnings per share. This is widely regarded as the most important metric. Think of it as the price you pay for $1 of company earnings. For example, Google has 12-month earnings of $103.84 per share. Its share price is $2980. Its price divided by its earnings is $2980 / $103.84 = 28.7.
  2. Beta: this is a measure of a stock’s volatility in relation to the overall market. Volatility means that it goes up and down a lot. The stock market is 1.00. If the beta is higher than 1.00, the stock is more volatile than the overall market. If it’s less than 1.00, the stock is less volatile than the overall market. For example, Tesla has a beta of 2.01. This means that Tesla is 101% more volatile than the overall stock market.
  3. Dividend ratio: Dividend Ratio: the percentage of the share price that the company gives back in the form of dividends annually. A dividend is a percentage of a company’s profits that the company gives back to shareholders. For example, Walmart has a dividend ratio of 1.5%. Their share price is $144. That means that Walmart pays $2.16 annually for each share owned. This is important to know because dividends are one of the ways you as an investor gets paid.