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by dternyak
2002 days ago
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I think this is true, but only to a point. It's certainly true when the comparison is 10K to invest vs 10M, as liquidity of markets is not yet a concern and the investor with 10M is suddenly "accredited", can afford to pay a financial advisor, etc. However, at 10M vs 10B, the 10M investor is much better off. Liquidity becomes a real concern - there's just not that many assets or stocks that can support that kind of allocation. Small, nimble investors can usually outperform large funds simply by being able to fully enter into positions where larger funds couldn't. |
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Large investors (like those with $10B) can certainly take advantage of small opportunities, but just not with their full amount. But because they are large, there may be multiple small opportunities which they participate in, and diversify on, rather than a small investor who must commit to a single small opportunity (which forces them to take on individual/concentrated risk).
So it's not true that the $10M investor is better off.