A couple of months ago we looked at Total Portfolio Approach (TPA) as a "new" type of portfolio construction. If you read that post from November, it doesn't do a great job of dialing in what TPA actually is because the articles talking about it didn't really dial it in either. Jason Kephart from Morningstar managed to crack the code with a very useful article. Based on Jason's article, TPA fits right in with what have been doing/exploring for many years.
Jason says that holdings are selected based on how they are expected to behave. We talk about expectations in this context all the time. For example, while a staples sector ETF will have equity beta, it's not a correct expectation to believe it will lead the way in a bull market for stocks. It might do that but it's an incorrect expectation. Client/personal holding BTAL can go up when stocks are going up but the reason to own it is that it has reliably gone up when stocks go down. It's reasonable to expect it to go up when stocks drop even if there is no guarantee.
Instead of stocks and fixed income, think instead of "growth and stability." That's useful.
He said the idea is not higher returns at all costs but instead to have a portfolio that "behaves more predictably" when markets get hit. He says this approach can make it easier for investors to hold on or as we say help avoid panic selling.
Applying this idea in his article, Jason talked about high yield bonds going into the 60% (or whatever number) as part of the equity allocation in a traditional 60/40 because high yield bonds tend to have equity beta. The idea he came up with to build a TPA is 50% in equities, 10% in high yield bonds, 35% in core bond exposure (AGG or BND) and 5% in cash.
After seeing that he put 35% in AGG he then said "correlations shift, regimes change, and assets that historically provided stability can behave very differently when the underlying drivers of markets evolve" which I found very odd in relation to 35% in AGG. My brother, the regime has changed. Duration is no longer stability.
If we forget about the term fixed income entirely and replace the word with stability, the stability sleeve wouldn't have to include fixed income in the traditional sense.
Portfolio 1 is proportional to Jason's 40% AGG/Cash sleeve and Portfolio 2 is built with strategies we use for blogging purposes all the time. It's hard to argue a lot of AGG and a little cash is all that stable.
A quote from a Barron's article this weekend that says bond investors want "safety, certainty and frugality." Frugality probably doesn't fit in that well in our conversation but safety and certainty do. In terms of TPA, I word it all the time to talk about alts behaving the way I think people want bonds to behave and Portfolio 1 above doesn't do that. It would not be a black swan if a move higher in intermediate and longer term rates were a contributing factor to the next large decline in equities. If so, then AGG which is intermediate duration would again disappoint like in 2022 even if the magnitude wasn't as severe as 2022.
Kind of related, TheItalianLeatherSofa blog took up our discussion from this week about our all weather portfolio that tried to allocate based on equal weighting standard deviation and excess kurtosis. The author's name is Nicola. Nicola is far more willing to hold duration. True to the Dalio all weather, Nicola models in TLT which tracks 20 year and longer treasuries. He believes that my thoughts about avoiding duration are a shorter term "macro narrative."
Since I've never held duration in the modern era (my 20+ years as an advisor), it's not clear to me I am expressing a macro narrative but maybe. The way I've described it here is assessing whether or not the compensation for the volatility is adequate or not. TLT is currently in a 40% drawdown that started in late 2021. Circling back to TPA, that is not stability. The investor who bought in 2021 and is still holding will never get back to even on a price basis.
Anyone buying TLT today at $88 might face a similar dilemma, never making it back if rates take another meaningful leg higher. If you believe four point whatever percent is adequate compensation for 20 years, buy an individual issue instead of TLT. If rates do go up, you'll at least get par back at maturity versus never getting back to even on the ETF. Waiting 20 years to get back to par seems like a terrible position to put yourself into. Different story if the compensation is adequate. If 7% for an individual treasury ever happens, that might be interesting for being at the low end of a normal equity return distribution. I'm not saying we'll see 7%, just saying that if we do....
Jason Buck frequently uses the word ensemble to describe a portfolio as opposed to a list of stocks that you hope will all go up. The cliche response is if they all go up together then they will all go down together. Building an ensemble, maybe in a TPA framework, by combining growth and stability in an effective manner can help mitigate the all go down together portion of the cliche.
The information, analysis and opinions expressed herein reflect our judgment and opinions as of the date of writing and are subject to change at any time without notice. They are not intended to constitute legal, tax, securities or investment advice or a recommended course of action in any given situation.