Thinning the Herd: Herd Investing Is a Disservice to Clients

Jeremy BoyntonAdvisor Perspectives welcomes guest contributions. The views presented here do not necessarily represent those of Advisor Perspectives.

There’s a quiet crisis happening in wealth management — not a market crash or fraud scandal, but something much more subtle: the erosion of independent thinking. In too many firms, career preservation trumps portfolio construction. Investment decisions aren’t made because they’re right — they’re made because they’re safe.

For many advisors, the biggest risk isn’t market volatility. It’s standing alone.

Especially in emerging asset classes like crypto, career risk is often treated as more dangerous than market risk — or at least as dangerous. Rather than mitigating risk by sizing an allocation appropriately, the default posture is inaction: Don’t be the first to move, and definitely don’t be wrong alone. There’s an old Keynesian quote that still rings true today: It’s better to fail conventionally than to succeed unconventionally.

That mindset might protect reputations, but it shortchanges clients. Entire portfolios drift toward the same set of “safe,” crowded ideas — often long after the best returns have passed.