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Is the passive 60/40 investment portfolio outdated?

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Content provided by ActiveInvestorMag.com. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by ActiveInvestorMag.com or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ro.player.fm/legal.

Ben Inker is the Co-Head of Asset Allocation at GMO. In his September newsletter, he makes the case for deviating from a traditional 60/40 asset allocation strategy.

Key arguments:

  1. Historical performance doesn't guarantee future results: While the 60/40 portfolio has performed well historically, past performance may not indicate future success, especially given current market conditions.
  2. Valuation concerns: Inker argues that both stocks and bonds, particularly in the U.S., are trading at historically high valuations, which could lead to disappointing returns in the medium term.
  3. Periodic underperformance: There have been six periods averaging 11 years each where a 60/40 portfolio either broke even or lost money in real terms, often following periods of strong returns.
  4. Lack of flexibility: A static 60/40 allocation doesn't adjust to changing market conditions or valuations, potentially missing opportunities or exposing investors to unnecessary risks.
  5. Overexposure to overvalued assets: The current 60/40 portfolio is heavily weighted towards expensive U.S. growth equities and credit exposures with narrow spreads over Treasuries.
  6. Geographic concentration: The traditional 60/40 portfolio is typically dominated by U.S. assets, potentially missing opportunities in other markets, particularly non-U.S. equities that are currently cheaper relative to the U.S.
  7. Limited diversification: The 60/40 strategy relies primarily on two risk premia (equity and inflation), potentially missing other diversifying exposures and alternative risk premia.
  8. Inability to capitalize on market dislocations: A static allocation can't take advantage of extreme valuation disparities, such as the current opportunity in deep value stocks or the spread between value and growth stocks.
  9. Currency effects: The 60/40 portfolio may not adequately capture opportunities arising from currency valuations, such as the current tailwind provided by cheap non-U.S. currencies.
  10. Changing risk premia: As valuations change, risk premia also change, suggesting that a more dynamic approach to asset allocation may be beneficial.
  11. Sector-specific opportunities: The traditional 60/40 approach may miss sector-specific opportunities, such as the current potential in Japan small cap value equities.
  12. Inability to use alternative strategies: The 60/40 portfolio can't incorporate strategies like long/short equity, which could potentially enhance returns and manage risk in the current market environment.

Inker suggests that the GMO Benchmark-Free Allocation Strategy, a more flexible, valuation-sensitive, and globally diversified approach to asset allocation may be more appropriate in the current market environment and potentially lead to better risk-adjusted returns over time.

  continue reading

24 episoade

Artwork
iconDistribuie
 
Manage episode 443926562 series 3219364
Content provided by ActiveInvestorMag.com. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by ActiveInvestorMag.com or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ro.player.fm/legal.

Ben Inker is the Co-Head of Asset Allocation at GMO. In his September newsletter, he makes the case for deviating from a traditional 60/40 asset allocation strategy.

Key arguments:

  1. Historical performance doesn't guarantee future results: While the 60/40 portfolio has performed well historically, past performance may not indicate future success, especially given current market conditions.
  2. Valuation concerns: Inker argues that both stocks and bonds, particularly in the U.S., are trading at historically high valuations, which could lead to disappointing returns in the medium term.
  3. Periodic underperformance: There have been six periods averaging 11 years each where a 60/40 portfolio either broke even or lost money in real terms, often following periods of strong returns.
  4. Lack of flexibility: A static 60/40 allocation doesn't adjust to changing market conditions or valuations, potentially missing opportunities or exposing investors to unnecessary risks.
  5. Overexposure to overvalued assets: The current 60/40 portfolio is heavily weighted towards expensive U.S. growth equities and credit exposures with narrow spreads over Treasuries.
  6. Geographic concentration: The traditional 60/40 portfolio is typically dominated by U.S. assets, potentially missing opportunities in other markets, particularly non-U.S. equities that are currently cheaper relative to the U.S.
  7. Limited diversification: The 60/40 strategy relies primarily on two risk premia (equity and inflation), potentially missing other diversifying exposures and alternative risk premia.
  8. Inability to capitalize on market dislocations: A static allocation can't take advantage of extreme valuation disparities, such as the current opportunity in deep value stocks or the spread between value and growth stocks.
  9. Currency effects: The 60/40 portfolio may not adequately capture opportunities arising from currency valuations, such as the current tailwind provided by cheap non-U.S. currencies.
  10. Changing risk premia: As valuations change, risk premia also change, suggesting that a more dynamic approach to asset allocation may be beneficial.
  11. Sector-specific opportunities: The traditional 60/40 approach may miss sector-specific opportunities, such as the current potential in Japan small cap value equities.
  12. Inability to use alternative strategies: The 60/40 portfolio can't incorporate strategies like long/short equity, which could potentially enhance returns and manage risk in the current market environment.

Inker suggests that the GMO Benchmark-Free Allocation Strategy, a more flexible, valuation-sensitive, and globally diversified approach to asset allocation may be more appropriate in the current market environment and potentially lead to better risk-adjusted returns over time.

  continue reading

24 episoade

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