Yesterday I mentioned QuantifyFunds filing for a suite of ReturnStacked ETFs that leverage up two stocks 100/100. I didn't realize that four of them would be listing today. In yesterday's post I isolated a use case of barbelling returns and volatility into a narrow slice of the portfolio. I built the following as an example of how it could work.
I'm not sure if there's a NVDA/HOOD ETF coming but both stocks are part of the filing. In 2022, Portfolio 1 was only down 3.98%, the Calmar Ratio is far superior but oddly VBAIX has a slightly better kurtosis. The idea probably has merit but to even entertain this, you have to be favorably disposed to the two stocks in the ReturnStacked ETF...or ETFs, more than one, that you choose.
If it actually works, it could provide close to 60/40 returns, I suspect it would lag some longer term but with very little exposed to risk assets. We could probably tinker with this to get a little more yield with the 95% from income sectors with very little volatility. We could keep it mostly T-bills but include bank loans, catastrophe bonds and maybe box spreads.
An obvious risk is that the stocks selected for these funds have already had great run-ups. I don't doubt Nvidia can double from here, or even from its peak but what if it takes Nvidia much longer to double than the S&P 500? Again, valid concept but it might be very tricky to implement.
The SPDR Bridgewater All-Weather ETF (ALLW) also launched today and I have thoughts. Here's some coverage and here is the fund page at SPDR. It's actively managed. Once a day, Bridgewater will send in the model for SPDR to implement. That doesn't mean there will be changes everyday. The description says it will hold global equities, inflation linked bonds and commodities. The literature lays out a quadrant type of approach similar to the Permanent Portfolio. Fun fact via Mike Venuto is that Bridgewater All Weather as conceived by Ray Dalio was influenced by Harry Browne and the Permanent Portfolio. That makes sense when you study them but it's fun to know that the two are actually connected.
ALLW is coming out of the gates with no commodity exposure. I'll check back tomorrow to see if that changes. From before the open, it had 25% in equities including TOPIX futures with what appears to be a notional exposure of about 4% of the assets. There's 36% in US dollars so maybe some of that will move into commodities when we look tomorrow. The rest is in TIPS of varying maturities.
The Bloomberg article talks about All Weather and ALLW being a variation of risk parity which it notes has struggled for years but so far in 2025 it is doing well because intermediate and further out treasury yields have gone down. A heavy allocation to intermediate and longer dated TIPS doesn't interest me a whole lot but perhaps it will all blend together to create a useful result.
The ReturnStacked guys hosted a Managed Futures Trend & Carry Flash Update Thursday at the close on YouTube. I don't know if that link will replay it or not. The funds appear to be struggling as managed futures and carry have been struggling. The funds use leverage to own 100% of two different things like US stocks and managed futures, US stocks and carry and some other funds. I'm not saying they are malfunctioning in any way but this has been a rough period for both trend and carry which is reflected in their respective prices.
We've looked at these many times and I have been skeptical the whole time. Hopeful I guess but skeptical, I've never test driven any of their funds.
The call seemed like a combo of explaining what has happened recently along with putting it in historical context as well as a bit of a hang in there sort of pep talk.
The ReturnStacked funds were presented as getting core exposure returns with a hopefully uncorrelated alternative strategy on top. Since RSSY launched, you can see how the Vanguard S&P 500 ETF (VOO) has performed. If an investor uses RSSY as I believe it is intended, the investor would be getting some of their domestic core equity exposure from RSSY, maybe 10%. VOO is up almost 11% and RSSY is down about 6.5% (not the CAGR because the period is less than one year). So if a portfolio wants to allocate 60% to equities with 10% coming from RSSY but I'm not sure an investor would feel like they are getting anything equity index related out of RSSY in its first nine months.
I was curious to see how just the carry portion has done. I stripped out the S&P 500 in Portfolio 2 by combing 100% in RSSY and 100% in ProShares Short S&P 500 (SH) which is a client holding. The number may not be exactly right but it paints a close picture.
The backtest includes RSST and client/personal holding BLNDX which both do almost the same thing, combing equities and managed futures. I knew from the first phone call before BLNDX listed that it would work by how they talked about targeting an all weather sort of result and how they would do it which I believe differs from RSST. BLNDX is intended to differentiate with lower volatility and it has done that. Corey from ReturnStacked has Tweeted publicly about why RSST's volatility is so high but I didn't understand what he meant.
A fund that blends together two negatively correlated assets together seems like it should have less volatility than, in this case, equities.
Toward the end of the webinar in the parting shots segment, Adam Butler expressed the belief that investors should have both carry and managed futures, they behave very differently which they absolutely do. And he thinks investors should have both combined with equities (or bonds presumably) in one of the respective funds to make holding them a little easier which I would push back on.
Using the example above, if a client portfolio has 50% in VOO and 10% in RSSY, that should get them to 60% equites. But the experience of actually owning it, the client had 10% in something intended to be equity exposure but has lagged behind by 17% in less than a year. In a stand alone fund, if there was one for carry, a client will understand that fund is for defense and diversification, that it is not an equity proxy.
It's odd to me that there is no fund that isolates carry by itself, a point I've made before. AQR has carry strategies under the hood of some of its multi-strategy funds so I have to think it can work if they are sticking with it when they don't have to.
The ReturnStacked guys talk about line item risk a lot. I think the line item risk to RSSY is much harder to explain than straight managed futures or any other alternative strategy that might have a negative correlation to equities.
Where I see promise for the Quantify ReturnStacked funds that blend two volatile stocks, this reiterates the point of sifting through a lot of things realizing you won't use most of them. I've never believed I would use RSST or RSSY but I follow them very closely. I've learned a ton from studying them since they first launched. If you're managing portfolios for yourself or clients, stay curious and learn as much as you can.
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