After more than 30 years of helping investors and business owners manage money through full market cycles, I have learned to pay attention when something feels off. Right now, something does. Stock valuations are stretched to levels we have not seen in a generation, and the market is rewarding the wrong things. That is the moment to*stress-test portfolio concentration*, not after the headlines turn.
Why stretched valuations have me cautious
When prices climb far faster than earnings, the market is running on momentum instead of fundamentals. We are seeing companies that lose money outrun companies that actually make it. When price stops paying attention to profit, that is not a market doing its job, that is a crowd leaning the same direction. High valuations do not tell you a correction is coming, and I cannot predict the timing of one. What they do tell you is that there is very little cushion left if sentiment shifts, inflation surprises, or the Federal Reserve changes course. You can follow the Fed's own policy path through itsFOMC meeting calendar and statements.
The risk almost no one is positioned for
Here is the part that keeps my attention. Most investors are leaning the same way, still expecting rate cuts and still crowded into the same handful of names. When everyone is positioned for one outcome, the painful surprise is usually the opposite one. In this case, that surprise is bond yields moving higher rather than lower. Rising long-term yields pressure exactly the assets that have done all the heavy lifting: expensive, high-growth, often unprofitable companies whose value depends on cash flows years down the road. You can track where yields actually sit using the Treasury's publisheddaily interest rate statistics.
Where concentration hides
Most people do not think they have a concentration problem until we look under the hood together. If you own broad index funds, you may be far more exposed to a small group of large growth names than you realize, because those names now make up an outsized share of the index. If you are a business owner, your concentration may be even larger, because your company itself is your biggest single asset. Add a portfolio that leans the same direction as your business, and a single shift in rates or sentiment can hit you twice.
How I stress-test a portfolio
The only thing we can really control in the investment process is risk, so that is where I start. Here is the practical work I walk clients through right now:
- Measure rate sensitivity. Look at how much of the portfolio depends on long-duration growth assets that lose value when yields rise.
- Find the real concentration. Add up exposure to the few names doing most of the work, inside and outside of index funds, and include the business itself.
- Run the bad day on paper. Model what a meaningful drop in those crowded names would do to the total picture, before it happens, not after.
- Right-size, do not bail out. Trim where the risk is larger than the goal requires, and rebuild balance across sectors and asset classes.
- Match the portfolio to the plan. Tie every position back to what the money is actually for, instead of chasing the trend of the moment.
What I am not saying
I am not telling anyone to run for the exits or to try to time a top. I have watched too many people sell in fear, miss the recovery, and never make the money back. Market timing is not a plan. The goal is to remove the emotion from the decision and come back to the numbers, so you are making changes from a position of strength while things are calm, not from panic when things are not. We are heading into the August through October stretch, which has historically been the choppiest part of the year. That is a good reason to look under the hood now, while we are still up here and thinking clearly.
Frequently Asked Questions
What does it mean to stress-test portfolio concentration?It means measuring how much of your wealth depends on a small group of similar holdings, then modeling how a sharp move in those holdings would affect your whole financial picture before it happens.Why are rising bond yields a risk for stock investors?Higher long-term yields tend to pressure expensive, high-growth companies the most, because their value rests on cash flows far in the future. Many investors are positioned for falling rates instead.I own index funds. Am I still concentrated?Possibly. A handful of large growth names now make up an outsized share of major indexes, so a broad fund can carry more single-name risk than it appears to on the surface.Should I sell stocks before a possible correction?In my view, trying to time a top usually costs more than it saves. The better approach is right-sizing risk to your goals so you can stay invested through volatility.How does this apply to business owners specifically?Your company is often your largest single asset. If your investment portfolio leans the same direction as your business, a single shift in rates or sentiment can hurt you in two places at once.
Work with Pinnacle Wealth Advisory
If any of this applies to your portfolio or your business, it might be worth a conversation:explore working with Pinnacle Wealth Advisory.
This blog post is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, tax, or financial advice. Past performance does not guarantee future results. Investing involves risk, including possible loss of principal. Consult with qualified professionals for guidance tailored to your specific situation. Doug may provide services and conduct business as Pinnacle Wealth Advisory with advisory services offered through SB Advisory, LLC.
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