Portfolio riskIntermediate

Sector Risk

Sector risk is the component of a position's risk driven by the fortunes of its whole industry, so that stocks within a sector move together and a book spread across names in one sector carries concentrated, undiversified exposure.

Quick answer: Sector risk is the component of a position's risk driven by the fortunes of its whole industry, so that stocks within a sector move together and a book spread across names in one sector carries concentrated, undiversified exposure.

In simple words

Every stock is partly a bet on its own company and partly a bet on its whole industry. Sector risk is that second part: the shared exposure that makes all banks move on rate news, or all IT firms move on the rupee and US demand. If your positions are spread across names but clustered in one sector, you are really making one big sector bet. Managing sector risk means watching how much of the book leans on any single industry, not just any single stock.

Purpose

This page defines sector risk as a shared-driver exposure, shows how it turns a many-name book into a single sector bet, and explains how sector limits contain it.

Visual explanation

Sector Risk

Capital grouped by NSE sector; an oversized sector slice reveals sector concentration hidden by the number of individual names.

Portfolio Allocation & Limits18%Position A16%Position B14%Position C12%Position D40%Cash reserve100% of capital — no single position dominatesPer-position limits + a cash reserve cap concentration and tail risk

Professional explanation

Sector risk is a shared systematic driver

A stock's return can be split into a market component, a sector component and a company-specific component. Sector risk is the middle layer: the part of a stock's movement explained by forces common to its industry, such as interest rates for banks, the rupee and US IT budgets for software firms, crude oil for airlines and paints, or commodity prices for metals. Because every stock in a sector shares this driver, they move together when the driver moves, independently of any single company's news. Sector risk therefore sits between broad market risk, which affects everything, and idiosyncratic risk, which affects one name, and it is the layer traders most often overlook when they believe they are diversified.

How sector clustering creates hidden concentration

A book can hold ten different stocks and still be one bet if those stocks sit in the same sector. Ten IT names diversify away company-specific risk, an accounting issue at one firm, but leave the entire IT-sector exposure fully intact, so a rupee appreciation or a US slowdown hits all ten together. This is why sector risk is a form of concentration risk that hides behind name count: the position list looks varied while the risk is pooled in one industry. Genuine diversification requires spreading across sectors with different drivers, not accumulating names within a favourite one.

Correlated sectors and common macro factors

Sectors are not independent of each other either. Several sectors can share a deeper macro driver, so they move together as a bloc: banking, NBFC, real estate and autos are all sensitive to interest rates, while exporters across IT and pharma share currency exposure. A book that spreads across these apparently different sectors may still be concentrated in a single macro factor such as rates or the rupee. Managing sector risk therefore climbs one level higher, to the factor that several sectors share, because the most damaging sector risk is the one that hits a whole group of sectors at once.

Sector rotation, cyclicals and defensives

Sectors take turns leading and lagging as the economic cycle and sentiment shift, a pattern called sector rotation. Cyclical sectors such as metals, autos and real estate swing hard with growth expectations, while defensive sectors such as FMCG, pharma and utilities hold up better in downturns because demand for their products is steadier. A portfolio heavily tilted to cyclicals carries more sector risk into a slowdown, while one blending cyclicals and defensives spreads the exposure across the cycle. Understanding which sectors are cyclical and which are defensive is central to judging how a book will behave as conditions change.

Containing sector risk with limits

Because sector risk is concealed concentration, it is contained by limiting the share of capital or risk in any one sector and any one shared macro factor, not just any one stock. Desks group holdings by sector and by factor, cap the net exposure of each group, and monitor those group weights as positions and prices move. The practical discipline is to ask, before adding a position, how much the book already leans on that sector and its driver, and to treat a large sector tilt as a deliberate, bounded decision rather than the accidental result of stock-picking within a comfort zone.

Formula

Sector exposure = Σ (capital in sector i) ÷ Total capital; Stock return ≈ market + sector + company components

Sector exposure is the fraction of the book, by capital or by risk, sitting in one industry. Conceptually a stock's return decomposes into a market component (shared by all stocks, via beta), a sector component (shared by the industry) and a company-specific component (idiosyncratic). Diversifying across names within a sector removes only the company component; the sector component remains and is the sector risk you still carry. Cap sector exposure to contain it.

Cyclical vs defensive sectors

AspectCyclical sectorsDefensive sectors
Examples on NSEMetals, autos, realty, banksFMCG, pharma, utilities
Cycle sensitivityHigh, swings with growthLow, demand is steady
Downturn behaviourFall hardHold up relatively better
VolatilityGenerally higherGenerally lower
Role in a bookAdds return and sector riskCushions the cycle

Practical example

Illustrative example (Indian market)

A trader with Rs 5,00,000 holds five IT largecaps, feeling diversified across five companies. In reality the book is one bet on the IT sector, whose shared drivers are the rupee and US technology spending. If the rupee strengthens sharply or a US slowdown cuts IT budgets, all five can fall 8 to 10 percent together, so a Rs 4,00,000 IT allocation could drop about Rs 36,000, over 7 percent of the whole account, from a single sector event no amount of within-sector name-splitting would have cushioned. Had the trader capped IT at, say, 25 percent of capital and placed the rest in banking, FMCG and a defensive name with different drivers, the same IT shock would have cost roughly a third as much, because the other sectors do not share the rupee-and-US-demand driver.

NSE sector indices make the clustering visible: the Nifty IT, Nifty Bank, Nifty Auto and Nifty FMCG indices each move on their own drivers. A trader can check whether their book is a disguised Nifty Bank bet simply by summing the capital sitting in banking and NBFC names against total capital, a two-minute concentration check most retail traders skip.

Limitations

  • Sector definitions are approximate, and some stocks straddle sectors or shift over time
  • Sector labels can hide a deeper shared macro factor across several sectors
  • Historical sector correlations are unstable and rise in a broad crisis
  • A sector limit does not protect against a market-wide fall that hits all sectors
  • Sector rotation timing is uncertain, so tilting toward a sector is itself a forecast

Common mistakes

  • Believing many stocks in one sector is diversification
  • Ignoring that different sectors can share a common macro driver like rates
  • Loading the book with cyclicals just before a slowdown
  • Setting stock limits but no sector limit, letting sector exposure creep up
  • Overlooking indirect sector exposure through an index or thematic position
  • Treating a sector bet born of familiarity as if it were a diversified holding

Professional usage

Risk desks classify every holding by sector and by macro factor, cap the net exposure of each sector and factor bloc, and monitor those group weights continuously as prices move. They distinguish cyclical from defensive exposure to understand how the book behaves across the economic cycle, and they treat a deliberate sector tilt as a bounded, sized decision rather than a byproduct of stock selection. Sector limits sit alongside single-name limits precisely because sector risk is the concentration that name limits alone miss.

Key takeaways

  • Sector risk is the shared-industry driver that moves all stocks in a sector together
  • Many names in one sector is a single sector bet, not diversification
  • Several sectors can share a macro factor, so cap factor exposure too
  • Contain it with sector and factor limits, not just single-stock limits

Frequently asked questions

What is sector risk?
Sector risk is the part of a stock's risk driven by forces common to its whole industry, such as interest rates for banks or the rupee for IT firms. Because every stock in a sector shares this driver, they move together, so a book clustered in one sector carries concentrated, undiversified exposure.
How is sector risk different from market risk?
Market risk affects every stock through the broad market, measured by beta, while sector risk affects only stocks in one industry through their shared driver. Sector risk sits between market risk, which hits everything, and idiosyncratic risk, which hits a single company.
Why is holding many stocks in one sector risky?
Because it diversifies away only company-specific risk while leaving the entire sector exposure intact. Ten IT stocks all fall together on a rupee move or a US slowdown, so the book is one sector bet despite holding ten names. True diversification needs different sectors with different drivers.
What drives sector risk on NSE?
Different sectors have different drivers: interest rates for banks, NBFCs and real estate, the rupee and US technology spending for IT, crude oil for airlines and paints, and global commodity prices for metals. A position inherits its sector's driver regardless of the individual company.
How do I measure my sector exposure?
Sum the capital, or better the risk, sitting in each sector and divide by total capital to get each sector's weight. Comparing those weights shows whether the book leans heavily on one industry, and the largest sector weight is a direct measure of sector concentration.
Can different sectors still move together?
Yes, when they share a deeper macro factor. Banking, NBFC, real estate and autos are all rate-sensitive, and IT and pharma exporters share currency exposure, so a book spread across those sectors can still be concentrated in one factor such as rates or the rupee.
What are cyclical and defensive sectors?
Cyclical sectors such as metals, autos and real estate swing hard with the economic cycle, rising in booms and falling in slowdowns. Defensive sectors such as FMCG, pharma and utilities hold up better because demand for their products is steadier, so blending both spreads risk across the cycle.
What is sector rotation?
Sector rotation is the tendency for different sectors to lead and lag as the economic cycle and sentiment shift. It means a book heavily tilted to one sector will outperform or underperform sharply depending on the phase, so a concentrated sector tilt is effectively a forecast on the cycle.
How do I limit sector risk?
Cap the share of capital or risk in any single sector, and also in any macro factor shared by several sectors, then monitor those group weights as prices move. Sector limits sit alongside single-stock limits because sector risk is the concentration that name limits alone do not catch.
Is sector risk a form of concentration risk?
Yes. It is concentration hidden behind name count: the book looks varied by holding many stocks, but the risk is pooled in one industry's driver. Measuring concentration at the sector and factor level, not just the single-name level, reveals it.
Does a sector limit protect me in a crash?
Only partly. Sector limits contain the risk that one industry's driver hurts the book, but a market-wide crash hits all sectors together as correlations converge, so sector diversification does not remove broad market risk. Hedges and cash are needed for the market-wide case.
How much of my book should be in one sector?
There is no universal figure, but many disciplined traders cap any single sector at a modest fraction of capital, tighter for volatile or illiquid sectors. The right limit depends on the sector's volatility and how much it overlaps with other holdings through a shared factor.
Can an index or thematic position add sector risk?
Yes. A sector index fund, a thematic basket or even a broad index with a heavy sector weight adds indirect sector exposure that can stack on top of individual stock holdings. Counting only direct single-stock positions understates the book's true sector concentration.
Why do traders overlook sector risk?
Because a list of different company names feels diversified, and the shared sector driver is invisible until it moves. Traders also tend to cluster in sectors they know well, turning familiarity into an unintended concentrated bet, which is why an explicit sector check matters.

Voice search & related questions

Natural-language questions people ask about Sector Risk.

What is sector risk?
It is the risk shared by all companies in one industry, like all banks moving on rate news. Even if you own different names, if they are in one sector you have one big bet.
Is owning five IT stocks diversified?
Not really. Five IT stocks are one bet on IT. They all move on the rupee and US demand, so a sector shock hits them all together.
What is a defensive sector?
A defensive sector like FMCG or pharma holds up better in a downturn because people keep buying its products. Cyclicals like metals and autos swing much harder.
How much should I keep in one sector?
A modest slice of your book, tighter if the sector is volatile. Spreading across sectors with different drivers is what actually diversifies you.
Can different sectors still fall together?
Yes. Banks, NBFCs, realty and autos all react to interest rates, so a rate shock can hit all of them at once even though they are different sectors.
Why do I keep losing across my whole watchlist?
You may be clustered in one sector or one driver. If everything you hold reacts to the same thing, one event moves all of it together.

Sources & references

    Last reviewed 12 July 2026. Educational content only — not investment advice. Markets and rules change; verify current conventions with SEBI, NSE/BSE and your broker.

    Educational content only — not investment advice. Examples use illustrative numbers and simplified models. Risk-management techniques reduce but never remove risk, and trading derivatives involves substantial risk of loss. See our Risk Disclosure and SEBI Disclaimer.