The way the current market event is playing out, most higher volatility diversifiers are not doing well. The most curious case is gold. The other day we talked about gold maybe having priced in something bad happening in markets as it ran higher at the start of the year. In late January a few of the accounts I manage for other advisors had grown to more than 10% in gold, the previous manager believed in a higher allocation than I do, so I reduced their exposure. It's really a big deal to size things appropriately. At some weighting gold goes from being a diversifier to being a source of unwanted volatility.
Gold's decline is odd to me. The price of energy going up makes it more expensive to pull gold out of the ground. That makes sense and sounds like a negative factor for the miners, the miners dropping makes sense. But this concern would seem to put downward pressure on new supply coming online so gold getting clocked seems like some sort of dislocation. It happens.
Client/personal holding BTAL has not been doing well for the last week or so as we mentioned the other day. Tech already dropped a fair bit coming into this and so since the war started its been down less, XLK is about 200 basis points better this month than the S&P 500.
Foreign equities getting clocked. Miners getting clocked after a fantastic run, I mentioned shaving that exposure down a little bit earlier in the year, it's important to size things correctly repeated for emphasis. Managed futures is limping along, as we said the other day we're still inside the initial 10% decline where manage futures doesn't necessarily kick in but I don't think it's the poster child for the markets' struggles like maybe gold is or bonds with duration which have been dropping in price over inflation concerns. Inflation concerns are another reason why you might expect gold to be doing well.
Things that have been working are the holdings that should look like a horizontal line that tilts upward. Anything with energy market exposure is probably up but of course holding on to those parts of the market is very difficult for the volatility the 99.9% of the time we're not in a war that threatens the energy markets. Also, straight inverse funds are working correctly.
No diversifier can work in every single adverse market event which reiterates the idea of having correct sizing of not just alternatives but everything. You don't want to find out you had too much exposure to equities after a large decline. Some diversifiers will work and some won't in a particular event. Maybe all will work in another event. Either way, diversify your diversifiers.
Gold is down low double digits. Will it keep going down? Who knows but if you have a 20% weighting you might be really sweating this decline. Get the sizing right.
Here are four all-weatherish funds that we talk about with varying degrees of regularity. AOR is a 60/40 fund. ALLW is a Bridgewater strategy. PRPFX is the Permanent Portfolio. Trinity is heavy on trend. And BLNDX is a long time client and personal holding. The chart doesn't capture PRPFX dropping 119 basis points on Wednesday or BLNDX' drop of just 19 basis points. TRTY and PRPFX are both doing better than I would have expected but they're not impervious to the broad decline. That speaks to the challenges that the war is posing to markets.
I forget where I first heard this but the idea with what we talk about in terms of defense, using alts and avoiding the full brunt of large declines is that we are trying to chop off the left tail, the large and negative outlying return. Right here, we're in about a 6% drawdown which is not a large and negative outlying returns. If you use any sort of defensive or diversifying strategy, if the market continues to decline then I would expect to get a type of convexity effect like maybe gold will figure it out, maybe more trends fall into place instead of the recent chop which would help managed futures and so on.
Whatever this event becomes, it will eventually end and then the market will start to work its way higher, eventually making a new high. The only variable will be how long that all takes.
And a quick follow up, Bloomberg is reporting that S&P lowered its outlook on Cliffwater Corporate Lending Fund (CCLFX) to negative based on concerns about redemption demand.
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