Sector Drift is the tendency of a portfolio's asset allocation to skew heavily towards a single industry (e.g., Technology) over time due to uneven growth, exposing the investor to concentrated risk.
You own an S&P 500 ETF, a Nasdaq ETF, and Apple stock. Congratulations, you are 60% exposed to one single crash. Most investors think they are diversified because they own 10 stocks. But if 8 of them are Tech, they aren't.
When a single sector dominates your portfolio, you're not diversified—you're concentrated. A tech sector crash can wipe out 60% of your portfolio even if you "own the market" through ETFs.
A "diversified" portfolio with:
Result: 60%+ exposure to Technology. One sector crash = portfolio crash.
The first step to fixing sector drift is seeing it. Our Sector Breakdown Pie Chart shows you exactly where your money is concentrated. Compare your "Naive Portfolio" (what you think you own) vs. your "Sovereign Portfolio" (what you actually own).
View Sector Breakdown →