Skip to content
Find an ETF

What does diversification actually mean?

You've heard it: don't put all your eggs in one basket. This is the whole idea behind spreading money out, and it's simpler than it sounds.

The basket and the eggs

Imagine you carry all your eggs in one basket. Trip once, and every egg breaks. That's putting all your money into a single company.

Now imagine the eggs are split across a hundred baskets. Drop one and you lose a single egg — breakfast is fine. That's spreading out.

An ETF does the splitting for you. With one purchase, your money is shared across many companies at once. These companies it holds are called its The individual investments the fund owns. The largest few are shown; full lists update less often. More → . If one of them goes bust, it's one egg out of a hundred. You'd barely feel it.

So the point of spreading out isn't to win big. It's to make sure no single bad apple — sorry, bad egg — can wipe you out.

Why one failing barely stings

Here's the maths, made gentle. Say you split €1,000 evenly across 100 companies. That's €10 in each.

If one company collapses to nothing, you lose €10. The other €990 carries on. A 1% dent, not a disaster.

Compare that to putting the whole €1,000 into that one company. Same collapse, and now you've lost everything.

This is why a fund holding lots of Shares in companies (stocks). More → feels steadier than a single bet. The wins and losses of many companies blend together, so one loud failure gets quietly absorbed by the crowd. Boring? A bit. But boring is the feature here.

The one thing it can't protect you from

Now the honest part. Spreading out protects you when one company stumbles. It does not protect you when the whole market falls at once.

Back to the eggs: spreading them helps if you drop one basket. It doesn't help if the floor itself tilts and every basket slides off the table together. In a market-wide drop — a recession, a panic — most companies fall at the same time, so a spread-out fund falls too.

What this means for you, as a principle: spreading out smooths the bumpy days and removes the single-company risk. It doesn't make a fund The published list of investments (the “index”) the fund aims to copy, such as the MSCI World. More → crash-proof. Knowing that ahead of time is what keeps you calm when a bad week shows up.

🤔 What is diversification (spreading your money out) mainly good at protecting you from?

Common questions

How many companies does an ETF usually hold?
It varies a lot. Some hold a few dozen, others hold thousands. The list of companies a fund owns is called its The individual investments the fund owns. The largest few are shown; full lists update less often. More → , and it's usually published so you can see exactly what's inside.
If it can't stop a market crash, why bother spreading out?
Because most bad news is about one company, not the whole world. Spreading out removes that everyday single-company danger and smooths the bumpy days. It's a seatbelt, not a force field — useful even though it can't prevent every kind of crash.
Does spreading out remove the risk of losing money?
No. Spreading out lowers the damage from any one company failing, but the total value still rises and falls with the market. Anything that goes up can also go down, and no fund removes that.