How “alt thinking” can help you achieve better investment outcomes
The challenge is to capture the full diversification benefit: to reduce portfolio risk without reducing expected returns.
If your investment objectives have become more defensive in light of a late-cycle equity market and the risk of rising interest rates, you may want to explore whether a traditional 60% Equities / 40% Fixed Income portfolio offers you the kind of diversification that meets your expected investment outcome.
Most investors understand that portfolio diversification is enhanced when three objectives are met:
- Volatility (as measured by standard deviation) is lower;
- Correlation between asset classes in the portfolio is lower, and;
- Returns are sufficient to meet an investor’s objectives.
The problem with the traditional 60/40 portfolio is that it has difficulties meeting all three of these objectives, as we shall see, leaving the investor exposed to the possibility of either insufficient returns or higher portfolio risk than expected.
Asset allocation is more challenging than many think and finding innovative ways to reduce risk without reducing returns has long been the pursuit of institutional investors. It is time for retail investors to approach their portfolios in the same way.
Beyond 60/40
An investor who focuses solely on the magnitude of returns without regard to risk would own a portfolio of equities alone. However, for most investors, this results in exposure to an unacceptable risk of loss. Equity markets can experience sudden and large losses. The S&P 500 fell approximately 50% from peak to trough in the 2007-2008 financial crisis.
At the other extreme, an investor focused solely on risk reduction would own a portfolio of guaranteed assets and government-backed securities — and likely be limited to returns of under 2% per year in today's interest rate environment.
The first step for the “alt thinking” portfolio manager is the capture of the full diversification benefit: that is, to reduce portfolio risk without reducing expected returns.
In Pursuit of Optimal Risk-Adjusted Returns
To illustrate this, we use 30 years of historical returns to compare a 100% equity portfolio to two different portfolios:
- a traditional 60/40 portfolio, and;
- a portfolio that introduces both an alternative asset plus an alternative investment strategy.