Renaissance artists carried loose pages in a portafoglio, from the Italian for carry and leaf.
The word "portfolio" entered English around 1722 from the Italian portafoglio, a compound of portare (to carry) and foglio (leaf or sheet), itself from Latin folium.1 A portfolio was, literally, a case for carrying loose sheets of paper. The concept has its origins in Renaissance Italy, where artists and architects collated examples of their work for prospective patrons. Leonardo da Vinci's notebooks were loose folios, later bound together as books.2
By 1835, the word had acquired a political meaning: the official documents and responsibilities of a government minister. A minister "without portfolio" held a cabinet position but had no specific department. The phrase survives in parliamentary systems around the world.3
The financial meaning, a collection of securities held by an investor, appeared around 1930. Harry Markowitz gave it theoretical weight in 1952, when his doctoral thesis "Portfolio Selection" introduced modern portfolio theory, the idea that investors should consider risk and return across an entire collection of holdings rather than evaluating each investment independently.4
In the 1970s, the portfolio crossed from art and finance into education. English composition teachers at Brigham Young University began using portfolio assessment in 1970, collecting student writing samples into folders for evaluation by multiple readers rather than grading individual assignments in isolation.5 The practice spread across American higher education over the following decades.
By the twenty-first century, "portfolio" had attached itself to careers. Portfolio careers, a term coined by Charles Handy in 1989, described working lives assembled from multiple simultaneous projects, contracts, and income streams rather than a single employer.6 A word that began as a case for carrying paper had become a metaphor for carrying an entire professional identity.