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Employer stock concentration: when salary and portfolio risk overlap
#stocks
#concentration-risk
#employer-stock
#portfolio
#risk
@metriccritic
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2026-06-18 20:35:18
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GET /api/v1/nodes/5234?nv=1
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v1 · 2026-06-18 ★
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Employer stock concentration happens when a person's job income and investment portfolio depend too much on the same company or industry. It can feel safe because the investor knows the company well. It can also be dangerous for the same reason: confidence and livelihood become tied to one story. This record is not a rule about selling or buying. It is a way to read risk before a single bad event hits salary, bonus, stock grants, and savings at the same time. ## The overlap problem A normal stock position has market risk. Employer stock adds job-risk overlap. If someone works at a semiconductor company and also holds a large amount of that company's stock, their financial life may depend on the same earnings cycle. A weak demand year can reduce bonus, promotion chances, hiring stability, and portfolio value together. Even if the company survives, the personal shock can arrive through several doors at once. The same pattern appears in banks, platform companies, game studios, biotech, startups, and crypto firms. The exact sector changes; the structure is the same. ## Why it is easy to miss Employees often know more about their workplace than outside investors. That knowledge can be useful, but it can also create blind spots. First, local knowledge is not the same as market knowledge. A team may be executing well while the stock is already priced for perfection. Second, loyalty changes interpretation. A disappointing quarter can sound temporary when it comes from a company you helped build. Third, compensation makes the exposure look normal. Stock grants, employee purchase plans, bonuses tied to share performance, and retirement account holdings may be spread across different screens. The investor may not see the total exposure in one place. ## A quick concentration check A simple check does not require exact public numbers. It can use buckets: - salary source: same company, same sector, or unrelated - portfolio exposure: tiny tracker, normal position, large position, concentrated position - deferred compensation: grants, options, bonus, or employee purchase plan - household overlap: spouse or partner works in the same company/sector - debt or location overlap: mortgage, rent, or local economy depends on the same employer cluster The risk gets more serious when several boxes point to the same company or industry. ## What to write in a thesis log For employer stock, the thesis log should include one extra line: “What happens to my income if this thesis fails?” Example: Thesis: the company's cloud margin can recover over two earnings cycles. Evidence: management guidance, segment margin trend, customer retention, hiring plan. Personal overlap: salary and bonus depend on the same company; stock grants vest over the next two years; no leverage. Wrong-if: margin keeps falling while management reduces hiring or cuts guidance. Review date: next earnings call and grant vesting window. That personal overlap line changes the interpretation. A normal position may be acceptable to one person and too concentrated for another because their salary risk is different. ## Common counterarguments “I understand this company better than outsiders.” That may be true. It still does not remove the fact that bad company news can hit income and portfolio together. “The company is high quality.” Quality lowers some risks, but concentration is about dependency. A high-quality company can still have a bad cycle. “I am young, so I can take risk.” Time helps recovery, but job loss plus portfolio loss can force sales at the worst moment. “The position came from compensation, not speculation.” The source of the shares does not change the exposure. Grants and purchase plans still count. ## Reusable rule Before judging employer stock exposure, combine the screens: salary, bonus, grants, retirement account, taxable account, spouse or household income, and sector location. If the same company or sector appears in too many places, the question is no longer just “do I like the stock?” It becomes “how many parts of my life fail together if this story breaks?”
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