Words matter. These are the best Diversification Quotes from famous people such as Donald Johanson, Joe Russo, Whitney Tilson, Anatoly Chubais, Barry Ritholtz, and they’re great for sharing with your friends.
All mammals undergo a certain degree of diversification. Darwin knew that. When he drew a family tree, it had many branches on it.
I’m more compelled as an artist to see diversification than I am to keep watching an Anglo point of view in storytelling.
As in most subjects relating to money management, there’s a wide diversity of opinion on portfolio concentration versus diversification.
The diversification of the people’s demand could not be followed by the state apparatus.
The beauty of diversification is it’s about as close as you can get to a free lunch in investing.
We can bring diversification through industry.
Mutual funds have historically offered safety and diversification. And they spare you the responsibility of picking individual stocks.
Diversification and globalization are the keys to the future.
As a consequence, geneticists described evolution simply as a change in gene frequencies in populations, totally ignoring the fact that evolution consists of the two simultaneous but quite separate phenomena of adaptation and diversification.
Over the last 50 years or so, we have seen an increasing cultural diversification across the country. Accents are a reflection of society, and as society changes, so accents change.
The oil and gas sector in the North Sea does have a strong future if we do the right things now, but we’ve got to make sure that the infrastructure is right to support the sector, but also to support, over the next few years, diversification as well.
We can no longer let the threat of an early frost send a chill of fear throughout a large portion of our workforce. Diversification is the only answer.
I like multinational companies. They may have 40 to 60 percent of their engines of growth in the United States, but I do like the diversification of being more global.
Growth without diversification, technological improvement, and increased productivity is easily reversed: all it takes is a dip in commodity prices.
As much as with increased exploration new gas reserves can be found, what must be obvious to all is that our oil and gas reserves are not renewable and they are diminishing, and to protect the generations to come, we must engage in nothing short of a radical shift in the diversification of the economy.
The development of our human resources is an area in which we need to do well as it is decisive in determining the success of our diversification programme.
In their pursuit of growth and diversification, African economies should consider transforming the discourse from a focus on industrialisation to a broader one centred on value addition in agriculture, manufacturing, and services.
In many ways, the Internet is about diversification, and yet, in the wrong hands, the digital world can use those very examples to reinforce the narrowest of perspectives.
We need to diversify our economy, and the energy industry would be a great place to begin that diversification.
For investors who do want to speculate in high-yield bonds, one alternative may be a junk bond mutual fund, which can offer investors the relative safety of diversification.
Wide diversification is only required when investors do not understand what they are doing.
The starting point for energy security today as it has always been is diversification of supplies and sources.