The average investor has a huge edge over large funds: freedom to concentrate. While fund managers diversify to reduce career risk, you can go deep in a handful of exceptional companies. Owning a meaningful position in three or four strong businesses often delivers more wealth than spreading your money across dozens of ideas.
Concentration isn’t reckless; it’s disciplined. It requires thorough understanding, conviction, and patience. When you know a company’s business model, market positioning, and growth drivers, you can afford to allocate more capital confidently. History shows this approach outperforms constant tinkering.
In Nigeria, this could mean focusing on companies like MTN, Seplat, or WAPCO. By holding enough shares to make a meaningful impact on your portfolio, you participate in compounding and market growth meaningfully. The question isn’t how many stocks you own—it’s whether you own enough of the right ones.
Concentration isn’t reckless; it’s disciplined. It requires thorough understanding, conviction, and patience. When you know a company’s business model, market positioning, and growth drivers, you can afford to allocate more capital confidently. History shows this approach outperforms constant tinkering.
In Nigeria, this could mean focusing on companies like MTN, Seplat, or WAPCO. By holding enough shares to make a meaningful impact on your portfolio, you participate in compounding and market growth meaningfully. The question isn’t how many stocks you own—it’s whether you own enough of the right ones.