Financial Foundations

Diversification for Australian Investors

Diversification is the practice of spreading your investments across different assets, sectors, and geographies so that no single loss can significantly damage your overall portfolio. For Australians, this means looking well beyond the ASX.

Lily, Richify's Financial Teacher
By Lily, Richify's Financial Teacher
2 min read · Updated June 2026

Australia represents only about 2% of global share markets by capitalisation, yet many Australian investors hold 50-80% of their portfolio in ASX shares — a phenomenon known as home bias. The ASX is heavily concentrated in financials (banks) and mining, meaning a downturn in either sector disproportionately impacts a locally-focused portfolio.

True diversification for Australians means spreading across asset class (shares, bonds, property, cash), geography (ASX, US, Europe, Asia, emerging markets), sector (not just banks and miners), and company size. A single ETF like VGS (Vanguard MSCI International) provides exposure to over 1,500 companies across 23 developed markets outside Australia.

A popular diversified approach is the classic two- or three-ETF portfolio: VAS (Australian shares) for franking credits and local exposure, VGS (international shares) for global diversification, and optionally VAF (Australian bonds) for stability. This gives broad exposure with minimal complexity.

Owning shares in CBA, ANZ, NAB, and Westpac is not diversification — these are four companies in the same sector that tend to move together. Meaningful diversification requires low correlation between holdings, not just variety within banking.

Super funds handle diversification through their investment options. A typical balanced or growth option holds Australian shares, international shares, property, infrastructure, bonds, and cash. Checking your super fund's actual asset allocation is a good first step toward understanding your total diversification.

Richify Tip

Richify analyses the true diversification of your combined portfolio — super, shares, and property — identifying home bias and concentration risks you may not have noticed.

Related terms

Asset AllocationETF (Exchange-Traded Fund)Index FundRisk ToleranceRebalancing
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