I backed Sirius Minerals and Neil Woodford. Here’s one thing I did get right

Harvey Jones says a well-balanced portfolio should be able to shake off flops such as Sirius Minerals plc (LON: SXX) and Neil Woodford.

The content of this article was relevant at the time of publishing. Circumstances change continuously and caution should therefore be exercised when relying upon any content contained within this article.

You’re reading a free article with opinions that may differ from The Motley Fool’s Premium Investing Services. Become a Motley Fool member today to get instant access to our top analyst recommendations, in-depth research, investing resources, and more. Learn More.

We all make mistakes. Nobody picks a winning stock or fund, every time. You will always buy some losers, and I’ve held two of the biggest of recent months. Yorkshire-based polyhalite potash fertiliser miner Sirius Minerals (LSE: SXX) and fallen star fund manager Neil Woodford’s flagship fund, LF Woodford Equity Income. Or rather, his former flagship, because he has now been cast overboard.

Highs and lows

I’m not complaining. I knew the risks (although I never expected Woodford of all people to foul up so badly). Save your sympathy for the locals who put a fat chunk of their life savings into Sirius, hoping that it would regenerate an economic backwater, or relied on Neil Woodford to manage the bulk of their retirement savings. I’ve still lost real money, though, and I can’t afford to do that very often.

I bought Sirius a couple of years ago, when the share price was trading at around 35p. Right now, the share price stands at 3.15p. I have lost 85% of the money I’ve invested, and will lose the rest until CEO Chris Fraser can engineer a remarkable turnaround.

Some people think he can. A government-backed rescue package would send the stock flying to where it was and higher. If it returned to the level I bought at, it would turn £1,000 into more than £11,000. So far, the Treasury has been cautious. The risk is almost impossible to assess, making this a total punt, and I’m not a gambler.

From big to small

Luckily I bought CF Woodford Equity Income soon after launch, so I benefited from his first successful year. After that it was all downhill, but I hung on in the hope that his strategy would finally come good, while ignoring the fact that the blue-chip dividend investor now fancied himself as a small-cap stock picker, with disastrous results.

Woodford also got his timing wrong on Brexit, investing in British companies that should recover when our EU exit was resolved, only for the process to drag on longer than anybody expected. He also made a string of lousy stock picks from Kier Group to Provident Financial, which meant failure on three separate fronts, rather than just one. One factor ties it all together – hubris. Almost three decades of being told you’re a genius can only go to your head.

According to my Hargreaves Lansdown account, I’m only 25% down on Woodford. I expected that to be a bigger hit but I’ll find out more next year, when the fund winds down and we all get what’s left of our money back. So what was the one thing I got right in this apparent omnishambles?

I diversified.

Even at its peak, Sirius Minerals never made up more than 0.5% of my portfolio. With Woodford, it was less than 1.5%. Year-to-date, my ISAs are up around 12%, including both capital growth and dividends, so overall I am still richer than before.

Individual share price meltdowns and fund collapses hurt, but as long as you spread the risk around, you can still come out on top.

Harvey Jones owns shares of Sirius Minerals. The Motley Fool UK has no position in any of the shares mentioned. Views expressed on the companies mentioned in this article are those of the writer and therefore may differ from the official recommendations we make in our subscription services such as Share Advisor, Hidden Winners and Pro. Here at The Motley Fool we believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors.

More on Investing Articles

Female student sitting at the steps and using laptop
Investing Articles

Getting started with investing? Here are 3 UK stocks to take a look at

The next time the stock market opens, it will be the new financial year. And Stephen Wright has three UK…

Read more »

Diverse children studying outdoors
Growth Shares

2 growth shares beating Rolls-Royce stock so far this year

Jon Smith points out some growth shares that have come out of the blocks strongly in 2026, with momentum right…

Read more »

Calendar showing the date of 5th April on desk in a house
Investing Articles

How much would someone need in an ISA to double the state pension and target a £24,436 annual income?

A full state pension is £230.25 per week. But James Beard reckons it’s possible to aim to double this by…

Read more »

Smartly dressed middle-aged black gentleman working at his desk
Investing Articles

New to investing? Here’s how to use the stock market to try and generate a second income

Is investing in the stock market a better way of earning a second income than starting a business? Stephen Wright…

Read more »

UK supporters with flag
Investing Articles

How much would someone need in a Stocks and Shares ISA to target a £1,667 monthly second income?

Our writer reckons a Stocks and Shares ISA is a great way of targeting a healthy second income. And it…

Read more »

Hand of person putting wood cube block with word VALUE on wooden table
Investing Articles

April stocks: 2 value shares I’m taking a closer look at

Value investors looking for shares to buy in April have a lot of eye-catching opportunities. Here are two that I…

Read more »

Investing Articles

15 FTSE 100 stocks have fallen 15% or more this year. Here’s my favourite

Our writer is bullish on a few FTSE 100 stocks that have sold off in 2026. But which one has…

Read more »

Shot of an young mixed-race woman using her cellphone while out cycling through the city
Investing Articles

With a P/E of 8.2 and a P/B of 0.7, are Barclays shares cheap?

Barclays' shares look cheap on paper. But is this really the case? James Beard explores both sides of the debate…

Read more »