Eric Critten sat for Matt Zeigler's podcast with Jason Buck joining in. Eric manages client/personal holding Standpoint Multi-Asset Fund (BLNDX) which combines global equities and managed futures. There were some good tidbits in there to share.
The origin of the fund came from conversations with advisors expressing similar ideas of what they were looking for in an alt; capture some upside soften the downside and do that with lower volatility. Those ideas also tied in what what Eric would want to do with his own money.
Researching and backtesting led him to conclude that a mix of global equities and managed futures was the best way to achieve this. If you look at how the fund has done it is hard to argue with the conclusion but there was an interesting part of the conversation early in the pod about how difficult spring of 2025 was emotionally before just about everything bottomed a few days after the Tariff Panic.
He didn't waiver, didn't deviate from the system or do anything but stick to the process but his comments made it seem he was worried. I know Eric personally and so this surprised me. They said that this period was the worst drawdown for managed futures in a very long time but I seem to recall late 2022/early 2023 being worse but maybe not.
BLNDX is 50% managed futures (there's a little more to it than just saying 50% though) because that is optimal per Eric's research but the three of them agreed that no one is going to have that much of their portfolio in managed futures. Eric made an interesting comment in passing that if you're only going to have 10% in managed futures, you should use the most volatile exposures you can find.
Let's check that out using AQR Managed Futures High Volatility Strategy (QMHIX), KraneShares Mount Lucas Managed Futures Index Strategy (KMLM) and Arrow Managed Futures Strategy Fund (MFTNX).
Although Portfolio 1 and SPY look very similar, Portfolio 1 was down much less than SPY at the 2022 low and although not shown, it was down less than VBAIX' low too.
Another important topic in the discussion was that to be willing to own managed futures means being willing to look different which is not easy to do they said. You really have to want to look different and endure the times when that is difficult.
I've long been willing to have the portfolio look different and I try to explain how the various diversifiers tend to behave to clients so they are not surprised. Part of the conversation on the pod was directed at Matt who is a practitioner and he gave an analogy of dogs and their owners who look alike. I think he was saying that investors who would be interested in alts will find their way to advisors who use alts but that wasn't crystal clear.
A final topic to point out was the idea that advisors should have a higher percentage of their money in managed futures than their clients. The idea is one we explored a long, long time ago that Meb Faber is known for but I may have beat him to the punch on the original iteration of the blog. I said that I have very little in equities so that I never get to a point where I am so worried about my portfolio that I neglect clients or that I am so busy trading my own account that I neglect clients. Meb's point is that as advisors our livelihoods, our actual business and our client outcomes all serve to lever us up considerably and so having a full equity allocation would just compound that leverage.
A few weeks ago we looked at a portfolio that consisted of just nine or ten managed futures funds thinking that mixing that many would blend out some of the negative dispersion which it did. Let's update that though to include the funds we looked at already in this post.
The portfolio with just the managed futures funds is not too compelling but Portfolio 2 is a little more interesting. It has a similar CAGR as Portfolio 1 with half the volatility (a little less volatility than AGG too). In the period studied, inflation compounded at 3.61% so the real return was just a shade above 300 basis points which is pretty good for someone who is looking to avoid equity beta which is the context here.
If we add 5% of Direxion 3X Tech (TECL) at the expense of managed futures, the CAGR goes up to 10.03% while the volatility only goes up to 7%. The drawdown numbers of the TECL version also look pretty good if you want to go in an see for yourself.
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