How Much Should I Invest in One Stock?

Professional investors follow strict rules preventing capital destruction. Limit single-stock exposure to 4-8% maximum per stock. Exceeding this threatens diversification entirely.​

The 2% Risk Rule (Practical Application)

Trading account: ₹5,00,000
Risk per trade: 2% maximum = ₹10,000
Reliance share price: ₹2,300
Stop-loss: ₹2,250 (₹50 loss per share)
Position size: ₹10,000 ÷ ₹50 = 200 shares

Even if this trade fails, loss remains ₹10,000 only—preserving capital for other opportunities.​

Why 8% Maximum Works

Holding 30-40% in single stock destroys diversification. One adverse event (accounting scandal, competitor threat) decimates the entire portfolio. 8% cap ensures any single holding collapse absorbs manageable damage.​

Sector Concentration Risk

Never exceed 25% in a single sector. March 2020 hospitality crash destroyed portfolios overweighting travel/hotel stocks.​

Optimal Portfolio Structure

  • 15-20 total stocks across portfolio​
  • 4-8% per individual stock​
  • Maximum 25% per sector​
  • 60-70% broad index funds/ETFs​
  • 30-40% bonds, cash, defensive holdings​

Real Example

₹10 lakh portfolio breakdown:

  • ₹6 lakh: 8 stocks × ₹75,000 each (8% each)
  • ₹2.5 lakh: Bonds/fixed deposits
  • ₹1 lakh: Gold/international diversification
  • ₹0.5 lakh: Emergency cash buffer

The Math That Survives Crashes

If single stock crashes 50%, 8% allocation loses only 4% portfolio value—manageable. Concentrated 30% holdings crashing 50% lose 15% entire portfolio.​

Stock market courses in Delhi teach position sizing discipline preventing catastrophic losses.​

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