Friday, January 03, 2025

Macro Is Sooooooo Back!

Barron's had a short article looking at global macro funds. We dig into the space here a little bit, several AQR funds seems to delve into macro and the article also included Campbell Systematic Macro (EBSIX) which we often use for blogging purposes as a proxy for managed futures. The article also mentioned three funds that were new to me.

  • Fulcrum Diversified Absolute Return Fund (FARIX)
  • OnTrack Core Fund (OTRFX)
  • Quantified Alternative Investment Fund (QALTX)

It's always interesting to see whether an unfamiliar fund might blend in to improve the overall risk adjusted return. Or not. Here's how they've done compared to the iShares 3-7 Year Treasury ETF (IEI).


OTRFX had a phenomenal 2020, it also had a strong 2016 and settled in with the pack the rest of the time. Here's the year by year with 2022 highlighted.


The Calmar Ratios are good for all of them but the kurtosis numbers are not which is a strike against relying on them as low vol, total bond replacements. Next is looking at how they blend in. To keep it consistent for this post, I'll use IEI.


There is some differentiation in terms of return, standard deviation and Sharpe Ratios. I would discount the result for the OTRFX version because the huge gain in 2020 for that fund is enough to skew the whole backtest. The FARIX and QALTX versions have less differentiation. 

None if the three create much of an impression of reliably delivering some effect that would enhance what I'm already doing but it was worth looking.

There was one comment on the Barron's article that said "High expense ratio and significantly lower performance than broad index fund combination (60/40). Why would anyone invest in these funds?" Regardless of whether you believe in macro strategy funds or any other type of alternative strategy, if you are one to study different types of strategies, it would be more productive to think about them in the correct way. Maybe there's a macro mutual fund out there that is a replacement for a 60/40 fund but that's typically not the objective.

Generally, macro funds and alts more broadly are trying to offer an uncorrelated return stream, uncorrelated to stocks, bonds and stock/bond combos. We've categorized these as being negatively correlated like client/personal holding BTAL or managed futures or uncorrelated like arbitrage and some macro funds would fit that bill too. 

Above, I mentioned reliably delivering some portfolio effect which brings us to this recap of AQR funds from Bloomberg. I think the article is talking about AQR's portfolios outside of mutual funds in reporting on AQR Market Neutral Fund because no ticker symbol was included. That fund was up 25.3% in 2024. That's an enormous gain for a market neutral fund at least in terms of how I think of market neutral. AQR has a mutual fund with that name that has symbol QMNIX and that mutual fund was up 25.29% so maybe Bloomberg did mean the mutual fund or maybe the mutual fund is managed exactly the same. Either way, when I see something like that, my first inclination to think that if it can go up by that much, then it can go down by that much.

That's pretty much the case with QMNIX' history. Portfoliovisualizer has QMNIX dropping 19.52% in 2020 after dropping 11% in 2018 and the same 11% in 2019.

There's clearly been some overlap with QLEIX, maybe QMNIX is a less aggressive version of QLEIX but it doesn't set the expectation of being a horizontal line that tilts upward. QMNIX is a five star fund but the expectation shouldn't be a very low vol, consistent result. 

This brings us to a fantastic paper written by AQR Founder Cliff Asness titled 2035: An Allocator Looks Back Over The Last 10 Years. It's obviously a tongue in cheek look at some of the crazy things going on these days like Fartcoin having a $1.5 billion market cap, the shenanigans going on with "volatility laundering" which is Cliff's term for the way private equity is made to appear to have very little volatility and a couple of other more useful reminders about important investment concepts. If you click through to read, make sure to click on the footnotes along the way, some are funny and some have very important content.

He's a big believer in Risk Parity which weights asset classes based on their risk which usually results in leveraging up the bond position. In ETF and mutual fund form, this has been disastrous but Cliff still believes in it. Bonds "are only boring if you invest in them traditionally. They are not boring in, say, risk parity or levered 60/40 portfolios which both, in this last decade, resumed their long-term pattern of outperforming unlevered, conventional stock/bond combinations of corresponding volatility, admittedly mostly because bonds were not as subpar as equities." So embedded in there is an expectation that stocks will look more like they did in the 2000's. 

Maybe, the next ten years will be subpar for equities, I don't know, and we'll have to figure something out if that happens but taking on duration, never mind levering up to take on duration, is not something I am going to do. The headache avoided by just leaving out duration is something I am very confident in. 

There was a quick mention of international equities which have lagged for ages. Going heavy with foreign was a huge difference maker in the 2000's and will be important again but I have no idea when. I have less foreign exposure than I used to but never bailed on it entirely. 

He went on at length bagging on private equity. I don't think he's anti-private equity, just making fun of what I mentioned above. I don't think the "good" deals will be available to everyday investors and it is not clear to me why anyone needs expensive illiquidity. If you have to have this exposure, I think one of the operating companies that benefits from running private equity would be a better way to go. Not an ETF, an individual name. 

He jokes around about bailing on managed futures at exactly the wrong time. I am a huge believer in managed futures, huge. Backtest it any which way you can and the results always look great but it is a very difficult strategy to just sit in. Managed futures can lag for a long time, there are several market conditions that increase the odds of languishing. 

A way that I've put this previously about managed futures specifically and alts more generally is that equities are the thing that goes up the most, most of the time. It should not be surprising then that a strategy that historically has a negative correlation to equities does poorly when equities are up a lot. We have two years in a row now where equities were up a lot and managed futures languished which is exactly what should be expected. I said the same thing in various places I-don't-know-how-many-times during the 2010's. 

In 2022, there were countless calls to increase managed futures to 20 or more percent which I equated to similar calls about REITs and MLPs before the financial crisis. The more time goes on, the worse the 20%-to-managed-futures calls look. God willing I live to a ripe old age and go through another 5 or 6 hideous bear markets, I am confident that managed futures will work very well in 4 or 5 of them not all 5 or 6. Picture the stock market cutting in half and your 20% allocation to managed futures dropping by a third. How bad would that be? Diversify your diversifiers and don't have a portfolio of diversifiers hedged with a little bit in equities. 

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.

Wednesday, January 01, 2025

New Year's Day Retirement Spectacular!

Barron's has an article about how to protect your portfolio, er sort of. Basically, after a couple of quotes from William Bengen, father of the 4% rule, about his tactical portfolio currently being 37% allocated to equities, there are a couple of suggestions from William Bernstein about just having less equity exposure. 

Portfolio No. 1: 15% U.S. stocks, 10% international stocks, 75% one- to three-year U.S. Treasury bills.

Portfolio No. 2: 15% U.S. stocks, 10% international stocks, 75% split between Treasury bills, five-year Treasury notes, and intermediate corporate bonds.

Then there was this surprising quote from Bernstein;

Over the long run, Bernstein estimates that these 25/75 stock/bond portfolios will trail a traditional 60/40 stock/bond portfolio by at least one percentage point a year. That’s a lot.

What do you think about that 1%? Can that be right? Wouldn't 25/75 lag 60/40 by a lot more than 1%? Well, yes, yes it would. Using testfol.io, we can go back pretty far.


Generally, I always say that if you need growth beyond the rate of price inflation, that you should have some sort of normal allocation to equities. Not everyone needs growth though. It's not that 75% in T-bills must be the wrong allocation but it's not going to trail 60/40 by only 1% unless short term rates get up in the 7-10% range. Where we talk about the importance of expectations, a portfolio that lagged 60/40 by a little with much lower volatility would be desirable for many investors but the idea that 75% in T-bills could offer that is not reality with rates where they are, it's an incorrect expectation.

What about leveraging up the equity exposure with a 2x fund? Keeping the same 25% in risk assets but going with ProShares Ultra S&P 500 (SSO) equates to 50% in equities plus then 75% in T-bills or The Vanguard Total Bond Fund (VBTLX).


If we go back to 2002 with this second back test using ProFunds Ultra S&P 500 (ULPIX) which is the mutual fund predecessor of SSO it looks bad because of how big of a hole any 2x fund would have had to dig out from after 2008 so there's some good context about the risk of any leverage strategy. The second backtest also cuts out the lost decade of the 2000's. 


Actually, the lost decade up until the end of 2007 was pretty good for this concept using 25% into ULPIX instead of SSO. 

So the problem was the Financial Crisis, this idea unravels holding through the financial crisis. How realistic is it to see trouble like that coming? Usually we address that as recognizing when risks are elevated not wild-ass guessing that a bear market will start. This is a bit of process taken from John Hussman. 

No BS, I flat out got ahead of the Financial Crisis. Here are some samples from Seeking Alpha here, here and here. All three are from late 2007 and talk about me calling it a bear market and defensive action I was starting to take. The third article linked is from 11/23/2007 and I say "I am convinced that the market has started to turn down into a bear." There's not much of a content trail available from 2021 but I was holding BTAL and BLNDX for clients (still own them for clients and personally) and derisked a little more late in 2021 when it seemed plausible that congress might actually allow the US to technically default on its debt. I added an inverse fund to client accounts, held it for a while, and the combo of BTAL, BLNDX and the inverse fund helped avoid the full brunt of 2022's large decline. 

So as someone who has maybe dodged the full brunt of a couple of really big events, I don't know how realistic it is to see serious market trouble coming. I have a process and am comfortable sticking with it but I don't assume infallibility. For as much as we explore using leverage and the concept of portable alpha, this post turned into a great example of how what appears to be a valid strategy (I do think it's valid) can get done in by an adverse sequence of returns, depending on how it's built. At its 2009 trough, SSO was down more than 80%. 

The closest I am willing to get to leverage in this context is leveraging down like having slightly more in equities, hedged with a reliable first responder defensive or a multi-strategy fund like BLNDX where the assets and the strategy give a reliable result. 

To counter Bengen and Bernstein, if you need growth then have a normal allocation to equities (repeated for emphasis) and keep some number of months' worth of expected expenses in cash like maybe two years' worth. 

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.

Macro Is Sooooooo Back!

Barron's had a short article looking at global macro funds . We dig into the space here a little bit, several AQR funds seems to delve i...