Over the years there have been a handful of reader comments that really stuck with me. One reader joked about the best way to die as being shot by a jealous husband at 110 years old, I told my dad that one and he really had a good laugh. Recently I referenced the reader who put 1/4 of his portfolio into Pozen 20 years ago and then there was a bad FDA ruling.
Another one came at some point in the Financial Crisis when a reader said to just put it all in Hussman and forget about it.
I'm not sure which Hussman fund he was talking about so I included both. Hussman is usually bearish and does a great job framing out the prevailing bear case but I think he leans very hard into protecting against the bearish conclusions he draws in a manner that seems to ignore the reality of markets going up the majority of the time. Although stale info, as of last fall HSTRX had 68% in cash versus an average of 6% for the conservative allocation strategy. The period studied is the decade after the reader left the comment, HSTRX has done a little better since, compounding at 7.09%. HSGFX is still compounding negatively.
There's a reasonable argument for Hussman being a bear market manager but "putting it all into" one strategy that is this defensive is not the answer.
All of that is a preamble to the iShares Systematic Alternatives Active ETF (IALT) which is a multi strategy fund that includes equity, credit and macro. Based on the description is seems AQR-like.
I wouldn't expect it to have a similar growth rate to equities over a longer period of time but the first six months of trading catches my attention. Just put it all into IALT and forget about it? I doubt it's a magic bullet for equity like growth on the upside but absolute return behavior in drawdowns but who knows?
There's no easy way to assess the holdings as presented on the website so with an assist from Copilot;
That still might not be easy to dissect but it helps at least a little. If it is difficult to understand the holdings then it will also be difficult to break down what is driving results so back to Copilot. IALT has benefitted from carry, look at RSSY for confirmation of how well carry has done lately. Before this latest run doing well, RSSY went down 30%, this happened before IALT started trading so carry can be difficult to hold.
There is an equity market neutral component to IALT's portfolio which is similar to BDMIX, you can look at that fund to get a longer term perspective. In the last few years BDMIX has been on an absolute tear but before that, it had mid-single digit returns more inline with what you might expect from market neutral.
Copilot also gave credit to macro trend and relative value so there is some overlap with managed futures which has also been doing well.
All of these doing well at the same time is not an expectation that anyone should have. It might happen 1/4 of the time Copilot said. If you think about these different sleeves being quadrant-ish like the Permanent Portfolio (completely different types of quadrants), how often do all four work at the same time? The entire premise of the Permanent Portfolio is that no matter what, at least one will be working which implies there will always be at least one that isn't working. "IALT is not designed to produce high, smooth returns. It is designed to produce diversified, low‑beta, multi‑premia returns."
Copilot did say it makes sense as a diversifier for being slightly positive in an equity crash, a little better than that if inflation spikes taking commodities higher, it will probably go down in a credit crisis and it would probably do poorly if yields spike.
Take those expectations though with a grain of salt. IALT is an active fund and might be able to manage around some of that. Or not. There's no way to know.
IALT would be a complementary alt to managed futures, merger arb, certain long/short equity and macro. It would be duplicative with alternative risk premia (AQR has at least one of those) and carry. I pushed back on managed futures and global macro not being duplicative but it came down to nuance. If you're curious you can go into the AI of your choice to get an explanation or maybe you'd get a completely different answer.
Turning this into a discussion of ways to use AI, this exchange mostly replaces talking to a sales guy. On the plus side for AI, I got un-salesy answers, the AI is able to look under the hood in away I could not and answer questions that I doubt a sales guy could. AI also has knowledge/understanding of other strategies. On the negative side, Copilot could be wrong about multiple things. If I was actually interested in IALT with its complexity, I would probably repeat this exercise with Claude to compare and contrast and then still talk to a sales guy. A call with a sales guy would probably be more productive after having checked in with AI.
I'll track this one. We might now know what the good times look like for IALT, it would be nice to see what the bad times look like or if it can somehow defy the occasional painful mean reversion that hits some of the strategies it uses.
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