Let’s briefly touch on risk.
There are different types of risks, and I like to say that risk CANNOT be eliminated — only managed. Keep that in mind as we go through the types of risks.
Financial Risk and Concentration: The Systemic Danger
Concentration in financial systems creates elevated risk through several interconnected mechanisms that can transform isolated problems into systemic crises.
Types of Financial Concentration:
- Institutional concentration: When a few large institutions control a significant portion of financial assets or activities. Examples include major banks holding vast percentages of deposits or a handful of investment firms managing enormous portions of retirement funds.
- Geographic concentration: When financial activity clusters in specific locations (like Wall Street, City of London), creating vulnerability to regional disruptions.
- Asset concentration: When investments are heavily weighted in particular sectors, asset classes, or geographic regions.
- Counterparty concentration: When multiple institutions have significant exposure to the same borrowers, trading partners, or service providers.
How Concentration Elevates Risk:
- Systemic risk amplification: When concentrated institutions fail, their collapse can trigger cascading failures throughout the financial system. The 2008 financial crisis exemplified this—the failure of highly connected institutions like Lehman Brothers sent shockwaves globally because so many other entities had exposure to them.
- Contagion effects: Concentrated systems create channels for rapid problem transmission. If institutions are heavily interconnected through lending, trading, or shared investments, problems at one institution quickly spread to others.
- Too big to fail problem: Highly concentrated institutions become so systemically important that governments feel compelled to bail them out, creating a moral hazard where these institutions take excessive risks knowing they’ll be rescued.
- Liquidity crises: When many institutions hold similar assets and face simultaneous pressure to sell, it can create severe liquidity problems and fire-sale conditions, driving asset prices far below fundamental values.
- Reduced diversification: Concentration inherently means less diversification. Whether it’s geographic (all eggs in one regional basket), sectoral (overexposure to tech or real estate), or institutional (relying on few key players), reduced diversification amplifies the impact of adverse events.
- Market power concentration: When few institutions dominate markets, they can manipulate prices, reduce competition, and create systemic vulnerabilities through their outsized influence.
- Information asymmetries: Concentrated systems often lack the distributed information processing that comes with more diverse, decentralized systems, leading to groupthink and missed warning signals.
Historical examples:
- 2008 financial crisis: Concentration in mortgage-backed securities across major banks, plus high interconnectedness, turned a housing market problem into a global financial crisis.
- Long-Term Capital Management (1998): A single hedge fund’s failure nearly triggered systemic collapse due to its enormous derivatives positions with major banks.
- Japanese banking crisis (1990s): Concentration in real estate lending across Japanese banks created a decades-long economic stagnation when the real estate bubble burst.
There are a handful of ways to mitigate this…
Regulatory approaches:
- Capital requirements that increase with institutional size.
- Stress testing of systemically important institutions.
- Breaking up institutions deemed too big to fail.
- Diversification requirements for key holdings.
Market-based solutions:
- Encouraging smaller, more distributed institutions.
- Creating more diverse funding sources.
- Developing alternative financial technologies that reduce concentration.
Risk management:
- Better monitoring of interconnectedness.
- Circuit breakers and automatic stabilizers.
- Enhanced transparency requirements.
The Central Trade-off
While concentration often creates efficiency and economies of scale, it fundamentally trades short-term efficiency gains for long-term systemic stability. The challenge for policymakers is finding the optimal balance between allowing beneficial concentration while preventing dangerous levels that threaten overall system stability.
Concentration risk demonstrates why financial systems require careful oversight. What appears rational for individual institutions can create irrational systemic vulnerabilities that ultimately harm everyone, including the concentrated institutions themselves.
Speaking of concentration, the following quote from JPMorgan’s Michael Cembalest sums up the insanity:
“Oracle’s stock jumped by 25% after being promised $60 billion a year from OpenAI, an amount of money OpenAI doesn’t earn yet, to provide cloud computing facilities that Oracle hasn’t built yet, and which will require 4.5 GW of power (the equivalent of 2.25 Hoover Dams or four nuclear plants), as well as increased borrowing by Oracle whose debt-to-equity ratio is already 500% compared to 50% for Amazon, 30% for Microsoft, and even less at Meta and Google.
In other words, the tech capital cycle may be about to change.”
Mag 7 stocks now account for nearly 25% of the S&P 500’s capital spending. And shares of AI-driven names specifically have risen by 259% since the release of ChatGPT in November 2022 (versus a 63% gain for the S&P 500).
This. Is. Unsustainable!
Most concerning is that the average Joe Sixpack is invested in all of this via passive funds, pension plans, and mutual funds. Their passive bid month in and month out is keeping this alive, but when it reverses (as it inevitably will), every mutual fund and pension fund will start looking for the exits.
Editor’s Note: What we’re witnessing isn’t just a market phenomenon — it’s a structural distortion built on hype, leverage, and blind concentration.
The same forces driving today’s AI boom are quietly setting the stage for the next systemic shock.
When the cycle turns, those who understand the underlying dynamics will be positioned to protect and even capitalize — while everyone else scrambles for the exits.
That’s why we’ve prepared a free special report, Clash of the Systems: Thoughts on Investing at a Unique Point in Time. It’s a deeper look into the economic, political, and cultural shifts shaping this moment — and what prudent investors can do to stay one step ahead.
Click here to download the free PDF now.
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