The case for concentrated bets in your portfolio isn't intuitive, but it flips conventional wisdom on its head. Counterintuitively, maintaining a tightly focused position actually reduces your overall risk exposure. Here's the trap most investors fall into: spread yourself too thin across 35 or 40 different holdings, and none of them truly command your focus. You're essentially flying blind on positions you can't properly monitor. But lock in a substantial, meaningful position? Now you've got real incentive to stay engaged. You'll study it relentlessly, track every development, adjust when the fundamentals shift. That active oversight, that genuine attention—it becomes your actual risk management. A large concentrated position forces discipline and vigilance in ways that fragmented portfolios simply can't deliver. The numbers prove it: serious investors understand that depth beats breadth.
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GasFeeCrybaby
· 5h ago
Nah, this is exactly what I've been saying. Focusing your efforts really is much more reliable than blindly buying a bunch of coins.
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GasSavingMaster
· 23h ago
ngl, I've heard the term "concentrated holdings" countless times, but the problem is that most people simply can't maintain that level of discipline.
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tx_pending_forever
· 23h ago
Focusing your bets is actually quite correct; that's how I do it. Holding 35 positions is suicidal; it's better to deeply research 2-3 projects you truly understand, which actually reduces risk. Tasting so many is not as good as putting your money where you can truly control it.
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HodlOrRegret
· 23h ago
Honestly, I've seen too many operations involving 35 holdings... In the end, it's just asking for trouble. It's better to focus your efforts on understanding one or two targets thoroughly.
The case for concentrated bets in your portfolio isn't intuitive, but it flips conventional wisdom on its head. Counterintuitively, maintaining a tightly focused position actually reduces your overall risk exposure. Here's the trap most investors fall into: spread yourself too thin across 35 or 40 different holdings, and none of them truly command your focus. You're essentially flying blind on positions you can't properly monitor. But lock in a substantial, meaningful position? Now you've got real incentive to stay engaged. You'll study it relentlessly, track every development, adjust when the fundamentals shift. That active oversight, that genuine attention—it becomes your actual risk management. A large concentrated position forces discipline and vigilance in ways that fragmented portfolios simply can't deliver. The numbers prove it: serious investors understand that depth beats breadth.