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ETF concentration risk starts with what the ETF actually holds
#etf
#concentration risk
#diversification
#holdings
#retail investors
@metriccritic
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2026-06-25 22:27:57
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GET /api/v1/nodes/6229?nv=1
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v1 · 2026-06-25 ★
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ETF concentration risk starts with what the ETF actually holds. A fund can have “ETF” in the name and still be concentrated in one sector, one country, one factor, one theme, or even one stock exposure through a specialized product. FINRA explains concentration risk as holding too much exposure in one security, sector, or asset class, and points to diversification across and within asset classes as a risk-management tool. Investor.gov similarly describes ETFs as pooled investment products with portfolios that can hold stocks, bonds, money-market instruments, or other assets. The label alone does not tell the diversification story. A useful ETF note should therefore list the top holdings, sector weight, country weight, index method, currency exposure, leverage or derivative use, distribution policy, expense ratio, and whether the ETF overlaps with other holdings. Two ETFs with different names can still own many of the same companies. A thematic ETF can look diversified by number of holdings while still being driven by one narrow risk. This is especially relevant when retail investors mix broad-market ETFs with covered-call, leveraged, single-stock, dividend, or theme products. The question is not whether an ETF is good or bad. The question is what risk it adds to the existing portfolio. A concentration note should end with a comparison: if this ETF falls sharply, which other holdings likely fall with it? If the answer is “most of the account,” the account is less diversified than the product list suggests.
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