4 Ways to Dilute a Concentrated Stock Risk (2024)

Investors may have seen a large run-up in their technology stocks. Stocks like Apple, Facebook, Google and Amazon all have had a great run. However, there is a reason for the saying “Don’t put all your eggs in one basket.” It may have something to do with the risk of owning too much of one stock.

Do I Have to Pay Taxes on Gains From Stocks?

According to a recent Goldman Sachs Asset Management study, 23% of the stocks in the Russell 3000 Index (a broad measure of the U.S. stock market) lost more than a fifth of their value in an average calendar year from 1986-2019. The study found the average stock was more than three times as volatile as the Russell 3000 index itself (Source: FactSet, GSAM).

4 Ways to Dilute a Concentrated Stock Risk (1)

Disclaimer

Source: Goldman Sachs Asset Management

Given the research from Goldman Sachs, investors with a large concentration in one stock may be on a wild and risky ride in the years ahead.

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Volatility is a measure of risk, or how much the stock price fluctuates. If a single stock is more than three times as volatile as the index, brace yourself for a wild ride. Volatility on the upside is a good thing. Negative volatility, or price decreases — as in case of Boeing, which is down 38% in the past year — can lead to steep losses (Source: Morningstar). That is why investment advisers preach diversification. Spreading the risk around different stocks can mitigate the effects any one stock has on the whole portfolio.

How Much Is Too Much of One Stock?

Despite research to the contrary, some investors are overweighted to one stock. When one stock is more than 10% of the portfolio, we call this a concentrated stock position, and a red flag goes up. There may be several reasons for the concentrated stock position. Some can't sell their company stock due to employer restrictions. Others don't want to pay the income tax on the gain. Some think the stock may go higher.

Investors should not underestimate the risk of owning too much of one stock – see Lehman Brothers, WorldCom, Enron, Pier One, Frontier Communications and Hertz to name a few examples.

What to Do about an Overweighted Portfolio

If you are concerned about the risk one large stock position has on your retirement nest egg (as you should be), here are four solutions to consider:

Gift Shares to Charity

Gifting stock to a qualified charity is one idea. Donating appreciated shares allows you to get rid of the stock and not incur the tax from selling. You want to gift the shares with the lowest cost-basis or the largest taxable gain.

Sell with Tax-Loss Harvesting in Mind

Before you sell the stock, see if you can use losses in other parts of the portfolio to offset the taxable gain. We call this tax-loss harvesting. This can only be done in non-retirement accounts. We manage several portfolios that actively harvest losses throughout the year when they come up. We try to match the harvested losses to the gain incurred from selling the concentrated stock position. This helps reduce the net taxable gain at the end of the year. The smaller the taxable gain, the less tax owed, which is a good thing.

How to Possibly Pay 0% in Taxes on Your Taxable Investment Gains

Taxpayers can also deduct $3,000 of losses from their federal taxable income each year. Unused losses are carried forward to future years on your federal tax return, and some states may allow you to carry forward unused losses on your state tax return as well.

Exchange Fund

For more sophisticated and wealthy investors, an Exchange Fund swaps your stock for a pool of diversified stocks. Since it is a swap, and not a sale, there is no immediate income tax due. The benefit is the new pool of stocks provides greater diversification. Exchange Funds are relatively new, available only to Qualified Purchasers (defined as those with investable assets greater than $5 million) and illiquid — generally a seven-year lock-up.

Zero-Cost Collar

4 Ways to Dilute a Concentrated Stock Risk (3)

Investors can also use options to mitigate the downside of a stock's loss. One strategy is a "zero-cost collar." A zero cost-collar involves writing a call option — selling a call — and using the income to buy a put option on the underlying stock. Buying the put option gives you the right to sell the stock at a predetermined price. That comes in handy if the stock price drops. Writing the call option provides income to buy the put option, hence the "zero-cost."

It doesn’t always work out to a zero-cost, but it is usually close. The figure above illustrates a collar strategy with Chubb Stock (ticker symbol CB). Remember: Options involve risk, are complicated, and can reduce your upside. It's best to consult with an experienced professional before implementing.

The Biggest Risk

The biggest risk, in my opinion, is not having a plan to deal with a concentrated stock position. Letting the years go by without doing anything only complicates the problem. The stock position may get larger and the tax bill higher. In my opinion, a diversified portfolio should not have more than 10% of the assets in any one stock.

Luckily, as described above, there are several ways to manage a large stock position in a tax-efficient and smart way. It all starts with a plan.

Disclaimer

The views and opinions expressed in this article are solely those of the author and should not be attributed to Summit Financial LLC. Investment advisory and financial planning services are offered through Summit Financial, LLC, an SEC Registered Investment Adviser, 4 Campus Drive, Parsippany, NJ 07054. Tel. 973-285-3600 Fax. 973-285-3666. This material is for your information and guidance and is not intended as legal or tax advice. Legal and/or tax counsel should be consulted before any action is taken.

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Disclaimer

Investment advisory and financial planning services are offered through Summit Financial LLC, an SEC Registered Investment Adviser, 4 Campus Drive, Parsippany, NJ 07054. Tel. 973-285-3600 Fax. 973-285-3666. This material is for your information and guidance and is not intended as legal or tax advice. Clients should make all decisions regarding the tax and legal implications of their investments and plans after consulting with their independent tax or legal advisers. Individual investor portfolios must be constructed based on the individual’s financial resources, investment goals, risk tolerance, investment time horizon, tax situation and other relevant factors. Past performance is not a guarantee of future results. The views and opinions expressed in this article are solely those of the author and should not be attributed to Summit Financial LLC. Links to third-party websites are provided for your convenience and informational purposes only. Summit is not responsible for the information contained on third-party websites. The Summit financial planning design team admitted attorneys and/or CPAs, who act exclusively in a non-representative capacity with respect to Summit’s clients. Neither they nor Summit provide tax or legal advice to clients. Any tax statements contained herein were not intended or written to be used, and cannot be used, for the purpose of avoiding U.S. federal, state or local taxes.

Disclaimer

This article was written by and presents the views of our contributing adviser, not the Kiplinger editorial staff. You can check adviser records with the SEC or with FINRA.

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Building Wealth

4 Ways to Dilute a Concentrated Stock Risk (2024)

FAQs

4 Ways to Dilute a Concentrated Stock Risk? ›

OUTRIGHT SALE The most obvious method to reduce the risk of a concentrated position is to simply liquidate a portion of the stock and use the proceeds to invest in a more diverse group of securities. However, selling outright may result in significant capital gains taxes related to the low cost-basis of the stock.

How can you reduce a concentrated stock position? ›

OUTRIGHT SALE The most obvious method to reduce the risk of a concentrated position is to simply liquidate a portion of the stock and use the proceeds to invest in a more diverse group of securities. However, selling outright may result in significant capital gains taxes related to the low cost-basis of the stock.

How do you minimize risk in the stock market? ›

If you feel there is too much stock market risk in your mix, one way to mitigate is by reducing the amount of stock and increasing the amount of bonds and short-term investments you own. Professional investment management is available at every price point (even free in some cases).

What are the tax strategies for concentrated stock positions? ›

Investors with concentrated holdings that have large unrealized gains should consider diversification strategies that aim to minimize tax consequences. Such tax-smart strategies include using equity exchange funds, tax-loss harvesting and giving shares to family members.

What is diluting a stock? ›

Stock dilution occurs when a company issues additional shares, resulting in a decrease in the ownership percentage of existing shareholders. The reduction in ownership can significantly impact the value of shareholders' investments and the financial statements of the company.

When should you reduce stock position? ›

Sometimes investors may need to sell a stock when the company's fundamentals change for the worse. For example, investors may begin unwinding their position if a company's quarterly earnings have been steadily decreasing or performing poorly compared to its industry peers.

How do you prevent shares from being diluted? ›

  1. 1 Negotiate anti-dilution clauses. One way to protect your equity stake from dilution is to negotiate anti-dilution clauses in your investment agreement. ...
  2. 2 Participate in follow-on rounds. ...
  3. 3 Secure pro-rata rights. ...
  4. 4 Convert to preferred shares. ...
  5. 5 Align with the founders. ...
  6. 6 Here's what else to consider.
Oct 26, 2023

What are the 5 ways to reduce risk? ›

There are five basic techniques of risk management:
  • Avoidance.
  • Retention.
  • Spreading.
  • Loss Prevention and Reduction.
  • Transfer (through Insurance and Contracts)

What are the strategies risk minimization? ›

Five common strategies for managing risk are avoidance, retention, transferring, sharing, and loss reduction. Each technique aims to address and reduce risk while understanding that risk is impossible to eliminate completely.

What does concentrated stock position mean? ›

A concentrated position occurs when an investor owns shares of a stock (or other security type) that represent a large percentage of his or her overall portfolio. The investor's wealth becomes concentrated in the single position.

What is stock concentration vs diversification? ›

Every investor must decide how to structure their investment portfolio. Two primary strategies widely discussed are diversification and concentration. Diversification involves spreading investments across various assets. Concentration focuses on a limited number of assets or sectors.

What is an exchange fund for concentrated stock positions? ›

With an exchange fund, investors choose to contribute their concentrated stock to a fund in exchange for ownership of an equally valued diversified portfolio of securities without triggering any current tax consequences. Exchange fund managers pool contributed securities from many investors.

How do you make a stock dilution? ›

To make a dilution, you simply add a small quantity of a concentrated stock solution to an amount of pure solvent. The resulting solution contains the amount of solute originally taken from the stock solution but disperses that solute throughout a greater volume.

What is the correct way of diluting a stock solution? ›

Stock Solution Dilutions
  1. C1 x V1 = C2 x V2
  2. C1 = stock concentration (beginning concentration)
  3. V1 = volume of stock required to prepare new solution.
  4. C2= concentration of new or working solution (desired concentration)
  5. V2= volume of new solution desired.
  6. Example:
  7. X = 160 mL of 5% stock solution diluted to 400 mL.

What is an example of a dilution? ›

Simple Dilution (Dilution Factor Method)..

For example, a 1:5 dilution (verbalize as "1 to 5" dilution) entails combining 1 unit volume of diluent (the material to be diluted) + 4 unit volumes of the solvent medium (hence, 1 + 4 = 5 = dilution factor).

How do you reduce authorized shares? ›

The number of shares that a corporation authorizes at incorporation is not set in stone, and can be increased or decreased over time with amendments to the company's articles of incorporation (but note that decreasing the number of authorized shares below the number of shares that are issued at the time of such ...

How can we reduce the number of stocks? ›

A buyback is a repurchase of outstanding shares by a company to reduce the number of shares on the market and increase the value of remaining shares. Treasury stock is previously outstanding stock bought back from stockholders by the issuing company.

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