
Step 1
Oversizing turns moderate errors into permanent damage
Even good ideas fail sometimes, and sizing determines whether you survive the miss. Oversizing creates a double problem: the portfolio drawdown is lar...
Position sizing decides whether a good thesis has room to be wrong. Most “blowups” are not idea failures—they are sizing failures: too much risk in one name, too much overlap in the portfolio, or resizing decisions made only when emotions peak. This research brief turns common sizing errors into safeguards you can enforce under stress: evidence tiers, starter sizing, add/trim rules, and a review cadence. Educational reference only—not investment advice.

30-second action
Pick the smallest next action now: test your bias pattern, run a scenario, or copy a prompt before making a portfolio move.

Step 1
Even good ideas fail sometimes, and sizing determines whether you survive the miss. Oversizing creates a double problem: the portfolio drawdown is lar...

Step 2
Many sizing mistakes come from ignoring volatility and correlation. A “10% position” is not the same risk if one holding is stable and another is high...

Step 3
A practical sizing policy uses tiers tied to evidence strength and downside clarity. Example tiers: starter size (idea understood, but key assumptions...
Even good ideas fail sometimes, and sizing determines whether you survive the miss. Oversizing creates a double problem: the portfolio drawdown is larger, and the investor’s behavior becomes reactive (panic sells, revenge trades, thesis edits). Treat initial size as “probation”: start small enough that a normal adverse move does not force action, then earn size increases only after evidence quality improves.
Many sizing mistakes come from ignoring volatility and correlation. A “10% position” is not the same risk if one holding is stable and another is highly volatile, or if several holdings move together in a drawdown. Track concentration drift (position grows without a deliberate decision) and overlap drift (new holdings are really the same bet). If you cannot explain the portfolio’s major risk factors in one paragraph, your sizing is probably accidental.
A practical sizing policy uses tiers tied to evidence strength and downside clarity. Example tiers: starter size (idea understood, but key assumptions untested), core size (assumptions confirmed by new evidence), and capped size (never exceed a limit that can break your behavior). The tier decision should be based on what you can verify (business durability, balance-sheet risk, valuation range), not on how strongly you feel.
Resizing done at emotional peaks is usually backwards: adding after euphoria, trimming only after fear. Pre-commit two rules: (a) add only when both thesis evidence and valuation are within your underwriting range, and (b) trim when a position becomes portfolio-dominant or when risk rises (leverage, dilution, governance, or correlation spikes). The goal is consistency—your resizing should look boring in hindsight.
Checklist: (1) Write the maximum position size before entry. (2) Define the invalidation trigger and what evidence counts. (3) State the volatility/risk budget you can tolerate without panic. (4) Name the overlap risk with existing holdings. (5) Pre-schedule the next review date/event. If you cannot complete the checklist in calm conditions, you should not size up in stressful conditions.

Starting with a full-size position before the thesis is tested by new evidence. A safer approach is a starter size that lets you hold through normal volatility while you validate key assumptions. If the thesis improves, size up by a rule; if it weakens, the damage stays containable.
Often, yes—because volatility is part of risk, and risk is what sizing controls. If volatility or correlation rises, the same dollar size can become an outsized portfolio risk. The key is to define how you adjust (tier shifts, caps, or bands) before the market forces you to decide under stress.
Tie size changes to evidence, not mood. Use a small set of tier criteria (what must be true to move from starter to core) and require documentation before any resize. If you cannot name the new evidence in one sentence, you are probably reacting to price action or narrative momentum.
Track position size as a portfolio percentage and treat increases as decisions, not accidents. Set a hard cap you will not exceed, plus a trim trigger (for example: position becomes portfolio-dominant, correlation spikes, or downside risk increases). Drift control matters because “great companies” can still create fragile portfolios.
Use a fixed cadence (monthly or quarterly) and update rules only when evidence or your constraints changed—not because the last week felt scary. You can also trigger a review after a clear process failure (sizing violation, panic exit, or thesis rewrite). Avoid frequent ad-hoc tweaks that turn sizing into market timing.
Define three evidence-based sizing tiers and apply them consistently in your next monthly review.