Some interesting stuff today.
First is that London firm Marex issued a structured note that is very Kalsi-like. It will pay a 7% coupon if Nvidia is still the largest company in the world when the note matures after its one year term. If it is not the largest company, then the principle comes back with no sort of interest or return.
Marex has more of these planned. Polymarket is pricing an 80% probability that Nvidia will still be the largest company a year from now so Marex can hedge based on that market. The article reads like this was more of bespoke placement but there is a very high likelihood that these will proliferate. Other than credit risk of the issuer, an above market return with the reasonable risk being that investors just breakeven is compelling. If this takes off the way I think it can, there will be quite a few issuers.
Ethan Powell from the Brookmont Catastrophic Bond ETF (ILS) sat for a short interview with Reuters. Powell said that AI will play an increasing role in how issuers price risk. Also, the industry will grow to take in different types of perils beyond the typical weather related perils.
Cat bonds are a terrific example of a part of the market where the results are consistently fantastic but where the allocation should be kept small or at least small-ish. The space yields 8-12% in a 4% world so that means there is risk there. It's not crazy risk and I think the risks involved are relatively easy to understand but if there is ever some sort of dreadful hurricane season then the bonds will pay to the insurers at the expense of bond holders. It would need to be truly dreadful but not impossible. When we play around with model portfolios, the amount I often put into cat bonds is far more than I use in real life. Likewise with the new product mentioned above. If they ever become retail accessible, keep the allocation small, maybe a little bigger if someone creates an ETF that holds a bunch of them.
Man Financial posted a paper this week called Apocalypse Now? The objective was to war-proof an investment portfolio. It's a wordy article with a good bit of data but the following was as specific as it got, it didn't provide weightings.
However they blend all that together, they backtested this result;
I guess it is a war hedge but it seems more like an all weather portfolio. I took a run at trying to build this using their inputs as follows.
SDS is 2x short the S&P 500.
The result had a higher CAGR and a little more volatility. A little more to BTAL and a little less to SPMO/SPHQ would dial that in if someone wanted. It's obviously very resilient in down markets and it's interesting that it was never the best performer during an up year for broad markets. The growth rate is very 60/40-like yet it holds no bonds. That's a pretty big building block here, the idea that there are many ways to offset normal equity volatility without using bonds.
BTAL, VIXM and SDS have down years most of the time and BNO is down about 1/3 of the time and very volatile. That's a lot of holdings, four out of nine, that all spend a lot of time going down. It's hard to argue with the bottom line result but that could be tough to look at.
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