Not All Diversification Strategies Are Equal

Advisors searching for diversification from a concentrated S&P 500 Index often reach for equal-weight strategies. However, a new report argues that all equal-weight approaches are not interchangeable.

Key Takeaways:

  • Equal-stock and equal-sector weighting solve different problems, and mixing them up can hurt a portfolio’s diversification.
  • Equal-stock strategies can create unintended tilts toward smaller, weaker companies rather than true diversification.
  • EQL equally weights all 11 market sectors while keeping larger companies at the top within each sector.

In recent commentary, SS&C ALPS Advisors’ Laton Spahr argues that equal-stock and equal-sector weighting solve entirely different problems, and that confusing the two can leave a portfolio exposed in ways investors may not anticipate.

The S&P 500 Index has grown top-heavy, with a small group of mega-cap companies driving much of its returns. Equal-stock and equal-sector strategies are two common alternatives, but the report argues they are too often treated as the same thing.

Equal-stock weighting gives every company in the index the same allocation, regardless of quality. According to Spahr, this shifts capital away from the largest, most profitable, and economically dominant firms toward smaller, structurally challenged ones. The portfolio, he wrote, ultimately “owns the ‘thorns’ in the same proportion as the ‘roses.'”