Position Sizing in Value Investing

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Benjamin Graham — Warren Buffett's mentor — gave very specific instructions on capital distribution across grades of stocks within a portfolio.

Optimum Diversification

Benjamin Graham — the founder of Value Investing — gave some very specific instructions on the subject of Position Sizing across various grades of stocks for optimum diversification.

Graham Grades

a. Defensive

Graham recommended a minimum portfolio size of 10 for Defensive grade stocks; or in other words, not more than 10% of one's portfolio per Defensive grade stock.

"Adequate though not excessive diversification... a minimum of ten different issues and a maximum of about thirty."

Chapter 5: The Defensive Investor and Common Stocks, The Intelligent Investor.

b. Enterprising

In keeping with the same principle, GrahamValue recommends a portfolio size of 20 for Enterprising grade stocks; or in other words, not more than 5% of one's portfolio per Enterprising grade stock.

This is due to the fact that Enterprising grade stocks have fewer qualitative requirements than Defensive grade stocks, but more than NCAV grade stocks.

Please note that Graham's own recommendation for this category was closer to 30 stocks, or not more than 3.3% per stock; but he leaves it to the Enterprising investor's judgment.

"If our winnowing approach had been applied to all 4,500 companies in the Stock Guide, and if the ratio for the first tenth had held good throughout, we would end up with about 150 companies meeting all six of our criteria of selection. The enterprising investor would then be able to follow his judgment—or his partialities and prejudices—in making a third selection of, say, one out of five in this ample list."

Chapter 15: Stock Selection for the Enterprising Investor, The Intelligent Investor.

c. NCAV (Net-Net)

Graham also recommended a portfolio size of 30 for NCAV grade stocks; or in other words, not more than 3.3% of one's portfolio per NCAV grade stock.

"30 issues at a price less than their net-current-asset value."

Chapter 15: Stock Selection for the Enterprising Investor, The Intelligent Investor.

Primary / Secondary

"Thus the distinction between primary and secondary issues need not be made too precise; for, if it were, then a small difference in quality must produce a large differential in justified purchase price. In saying this we are admitting a middle ground in the classification of common stocks, although we counseled against such a middle ground in the classification of investors."

Benjamin Graham, Chapter 6: Portfolio Policy for the Enterprising Investor: Negative Approach, The Intelligent Investor.

The nomenclature that Graham himself uses for Grades in stocks are Primary and Secondary, with both the Enterprising and NCAV rules being included in the latter.

Defensive and Enterprising are actually two very different types of investors, an important distinction that Graham emphasizes on.

However, to clearly differentiate between the three sets of rules, the Graham Grades on GrahamValue are classified as Defensive, Enterprising and NCAV; instead of Primary and Secondary.

An Example

As an example, one could distribute 100% of one's capital across:

  • Five Defensive grade stocks (5 x 10% = 50%), plus
  • Six Enterprising grade stocks (6 x 5% = 30%), plus
  • Six NCAV grade stocks (6 x 3.3% = 20%)

Warren Buffett too has described the pros and cons of Diversification in great detail.

Buffett on Diversification

At the 1996 Berkshire Hathaway Annual Shareholders Meeting, Buffett gave the following explanation of how owning fewer stocks can be less risky if one knows what one's doing.

"There is less risk in owning three easy-to-identify, wonderful businesses than there is in owning 50 well-known, big businesses."

Warren Buffett, Berkshire Hathaway: Annual Shareholders Meeting (1996).

Buffett In 1962

Warren Buffett talks about market corrections, forecasts, upsides and downsides; in an interview for KMTV Omaha, in early June 1962.

Buffett is 32 years old here, and this is the first known recording of him.

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Benjamin Graham, the father of Value Investing, provided specific guidelines for capital distribution across different grades of stocks to achieve optimal diversification. For Defensive grade stocks, he recommended a minimum of 10 stocks, with no more than 10% of the portfolio in any single stock. For Enterprising grade stocks, he suggested a portfolio of 20 stocks, limiting each to 5%, although he originally advised around 30 stocks at 3.3% each. For NCAV (Net-Net) stocks, he recommended a portfolio of 30 stocks, with a maximum of 3.3% per stock. Graham emphasized the distinction between Defensive and Enterprising investors, noting that the latter could exercise more judgment in stock selection. An example of portfolio distribution could include 50% in Defensive stocks, 30% in Enterprising stocks, and 20% in NCAV stocks. Warren Buffett, Graham's protégé, has also discussed the merits of diversification, suggesting that owning fewer, well-understood stocks can be less risky than a larger portfolio of well-known companies. This reflects Graham's principles while highlighting the importance of investor knowledge in managing risk.