What to do when bonds no longer hedge stocks
For the first time in decades, bonds haven’t protected balanced portfolios. What to do?
The formula had worked perfectly for 40 years. Invest predominantly in stocks. Occasionally, they lose a great deal of money, but over time they profit handsomely. Cushion the inevitable stock market blows with bonds, predominantly safe government debt. When equities decline, bond prices inevitably will increase, because during stock bear markets investors seek safety. Risk on, risk off.
As Morningstar’s Amy Arnott writes, that seemingly foolproof approach has at long last flopped. Stocks have plummeted; long bonds have plummeted. For several decades, the umbrella provided by balanced funds had shielded both sun and rain. However, when the flood arrived, the umbrella no longer sufficed.
The following chart demonstrates the extent of bonds’ 2022 failure. It shows the annualized rate of return for 20-year US Treasury bonds, as represented by the Ibbotson Associates Long Government Bond Index, during the major bear markets of the past four decades. (If a couple of these results seem very high, remember that they are annualized figures, derived from shorter time periods.
Ouch! That outcome has wrought havoc on allegedly safe funds. This week, a reader wrote to me, “I am bewildered by the performance of Vanguard STAR (a 60/40 fund). Wasn’t this fund designed as an all-in-one option? It is tanking.” Indeed, it is. Vanguard STAR is down 20% so far this year. But its misery shares plenty of company. Every flavor of balanced portfolio has suffered, including target-date funds. With rare exception, all rely upon a similar blueprint of risk on, risk off.
Option 1: Stay the course
Balanced-fund investors have three options. One is to pretend that this year never happened, by continuing to do what they have long been doing. Playing ostrich seems silly; even enigmatic gurus rarely suggest poking one’s head into the sand. But it often is sound investment policy.
After Black Monday, many asserted that strategic asset allocation was dead. The stock market’s abrupt plunge had demonstrated the need for market-timing. After the technology-stock crash, hedge funds became fashionable. Several years later, following the financial crisis, the watchword was “liquid alternative funds.”
All would have been mistakes. Every market-timing fund has since disappeared. Hedge funds thrived for a short while, but they disappointed during 2008 and have not since regained their form. And while liquid alternative funds have shone recently, they have not improved upon the conventional choice. Since the financial crisis ended, a balanced portfolio that invested 60% in large-company stocks and 40% in intermediate-term bonds would have returned just as much as a rival that exchanged its bonds for liquid alternatives, while being less volatile.
Of course, this time might be different. Today’s conditions might signal a return to the environment of the 1970s, when inflation raged and bonds were ongoing losers. Rather than wait out the sandstorm, the ostrich might get buried.
Option 2: Allocate differently
My colleague Amy Arnott suggests that investors add variety. Rather than rely on what essentially are two assets—stocks to provide high returns, and bonds to function as ballast—balanced portfolios should invest more broadly. Along with large dollops of international stocks and bonds, such portfolios also include 5% positions in: 1) high-yield bonds, 2) REITs, 3) gold, and 4) other commodities.
Such counsel, of course, comes somewhat after the fact. (In fairness to Amy, she argued similarly last year.) But that does not mean that it arrives too late. If the developed world has indeed entered a new economic era then greater portfolio diversification should benefit investors for the foreseeable future.
There are three potential drawbacks to increasing portfolio diversification. It involves more work than owning only two investments. It will likely be more expensive, because funds that hold less-common asset classes typically charge more for their services. Finally, if a new economic era has not in fact dawned, such that inflation subsides, bonds will promptly recapture what they have lost. The investor who has made a “strategic” shift will find herself whipsawed.
The mining heavy Australian Stock Exchange already provides plenty of commodity diversification for broad-index investors down under. Further commodity exposure should be weighed carefully.
Option 3: Become tactical
Perhaps inflation will neither persist for several years nor soon abate. In which case, balanced-fund shareholders might benefit by temporarily adjusting their allocations to favor inflation-resistant assets such as commodities, gold, and liquid alternatives. Then, when the economic climate reverts to the norm, swap those assets for Treasuries, thereby returning to the previous formula.
That sounds good. Unfortunately, the record of professional managed mutual funds that invest in such fashion is dismal. Ten years ago, 22 funds promised in their names to provide “tactical allocation.” Today, only five of those funds remain. The rest have been either liquidated or merged. Predicting the future is delightfully easy when done in hindsight but wretchedly difficult in practice.
Thus, I cannot recommend tactical allocation. Periodically, I receive emails from readers who recently have made lucrative trades, and who cannot understand how others missed what they spotted. It seemed so obvious to them. The letters invariably are graciously phrased; the writers are puzzled rather than boastful. To which I can only respond: Best of luck! My talents do not lie in that direction. Nor, regrettably, do those of professional investment managers.
Final words
All three options are imperfect. Staying the course may lead to additional inflation-related losses; switching to a new strategic allocation courts the danger of whipsaw; and tactical allocation is only for the gifted or lucky. That said, even after their recent upticks, long US Treasury yields remain unappealingly low. Long-term Australian government debt is materially higher at just over 4%, although it remains well below pre-2008 levels. Even at the risk of missing a long-bond rally, I prefer offsetting equities with intermediate-term notes or even cash.
Also, Amy’s advice is perpetually sound. Not all investors will wish to implement her suggestions fully. But as attractive as the customary 60% stock/40% bond approach can be, there is something to be said for smoothing the strategy’s edges, by adding assets that might be able to profit during those unusual occasions when both stocks and high-quality bonds swoon.
John Rekenthaler ([email protected]) has been researching the fund industry since 1988. He is now a columnist for Morningstar.com and a member of Morningstar's investment research department. John is quick to point out that while Morningstar typically agrees with the views of the Rekenthaler Report, his views are his own.