Forum Topics Macro Outlook
Chagsy
Added a month ago

Well, another month or two goes by and now we have a whole new Macro threat to worry about. Gotta love the Donald. He keeps you on your toes.

I've spent the last couple of days in a deep funk. You see, the timing stinks: I'm 100% exposed to equities in my Super, and have a significant chunk of equities outside of Super. 6 months ago I made the decision to retire and the spreadsheets looked great: not exactly a turn left on every aeroplane, but the occasional treat, and no major concerns about cashflow or outliving my finances.

Now I'm not so sure.

The issue, is of course, sequencing risk. I know Ive banged on about this before, but this time its personal:

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Possibly one of the worst sequels of all time.

Although Chatty has re-made this in a more contemporaneous fashion:

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Anyhoo, heading into retirement with an imminent share market crash and the labour government about to kibosh my super top up plans (by selling an investment property) with a change in the capital gains tax, has made me reflect:

"Where should I be parking my funds now?"

Now, if I was 20 years younger it would still all be in the MSCI world index. But I'm not. My knees and back remind me of this every time I get out of bed in the morning. My prostate reminds of this every night at 03:30. I could go on.

For those of you that are as old as I am, there is probably a dim memory of sitting in Dad's car aged about, 6 lining up in the hours-long queue to get petrol at the servo. That was the 1973 oil shock. Back then the whole world was in a stagflationary environment which lasted many years. You might think this could never happen nowadays, the world is not so oil intensive, The Don can just stop the war and everything will go back to normal, and surely ...umm ... AI will fix it, won't it?

Sadly, I'm not sure any of the above holds true.

Firstly, the Straits of Hormuz are shut. Not priced into markets at all. They will remain shut for weeks, and potentially months. The decision to re-open them does not lie with the Don, but with Iran. The Houthis manage to stop oil tankers with a budget of 4 rials and about seven homemade drones, despite the greatest superpower's best efforts. Although its being flattened, Iran and the Revolutionary Guard possess a lot more firepower.

Secondly, even if the war stopped tomorrow, it will take months to re-open oil wells, repair infrastructure, fire up (or is that chill down) LNG plants to get back to BAU.

Thirdly, the risk that Iran can hold the world to ransom will still exist if the war is stopped. If it doesn't stop then we have likely months of interrupted supply of 15% of the worlds oil and perhaps more importantly 20% of the world's LNG. Leading to...

Fourthly, the knock on effects of reduced global hydrocarbons. Fertilisers, plastics, travel, food supply, the cost of everything that requires transporting etc etc etc. So profoundly inflationary. Inflation equals higher interest rates. Western governments are already heavily in debt and struggling to pay the interest. What happens next?

It's difficult to see that markets have priced in the downside correctly, atm. I think we are in for a bit of a crunch on Monday (or the Monday after that) as the reality sinks in.

So, back to "the question at the top", as US podcasters love to say.

Bonds - screwed

Gold - should be good, but already expensive

BTC - who knows

Infrastructure - probably safe but leveraged and exposed to interest rates

Cash - safe in the very short term but with rising inflation, not a good option

Stocks - probably going to take a big hit. obviously depends on sector. Could be a flight to safety eg healthcare, quality, value, commodity Co's etc. Growth stocks do badly - note to self, just bought a whole bunch of growth stocks....

Commodity ETFs - likely to do well, both soft and hard.

Private credit - I'm way too cautious and find the whole thing opaque

Listed Property - usually highly leveraged and exposed to interest rates, but historically have done well in stagflationary environments.


There are some other left-field options, which is kind of where I started, but as often happens I ended up having a bit of ramble:

Aluminium. Who knew 10% of global supply comes through Straights of Hormuz? Cheap energy = cheap refining. S32 would be a good play, and more generally as a commodity buy.

Fertilisers,

Cement.

Here's a little table of possible ASX listed wins:

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“Ray Dalio once described the “Holy Grail of Investing” as assembling fifteen good, uncorrelated return streams. Most equity portfolios fall short of that standard at the best of times, but in a higher-inflation, higher-rate environment the problem compounds: the assets that dominate most portfolios tend to move in the same direction, and it’s usually down. We don’t know for sure what the RBA will do next week, but a hike is well and truly on the cards, and we should be live to the possibility that more could follow. Having some exposure to businesses with an intrinsic interest rate hedge, and there aren’t many on the ASX, makes good sense.” from MS.


Be really interested in other's opinions on opportunities that this mess might throw up. Could be some rough times ahead for emerging markets, Ive sold out entirely.

Best

C

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mikebrisy
Added a month ago

@Chagsy good summary and I largely agree. A prolonged closure of the SoH is not priced in to markets. Historically, these don’t price geopolitical risk well, but the odd thing here is that the risk has crystallised and as you’ve pointed out it’s not in POTUS’ gift to re-open the SoH.

The respected commentators I follow, (including those who are well connected to those who understand the regime) believe that Iran is going to apply leverage this time to try and change the game for the long term. They also believe the regime has a much higher tolerance for pain than DJT.

Interestingly, some of the things the US has said and done appears to be strengthening the hand of the regime, making regime change less likely.

We’ll see.

My strategy is simple. Keep 2-3 years in cash/money market funds and just keep on truckin. That means, beyond the buffer, I’m fully invested 75% equities / 25% fixed income. I’m fully braced for pain, but hope that in 2-3 yrs time, it will be in the rear view mirror.

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Chagsy
Added a month ago

Thanks @mikebrisy

Sage words and a steady hand.

I always think I can be cleverer than is good for me!

Out of interest is your fixed interest portfolio a vanilla one? Or do you have an active manager.

The reason I ask is that every time I’ve looked into bonds I discover a couple of things:

1/ active managers do better than passive (oooh! There is an exception, Mr Bogle)

2/ discovering what your Super fixed interest portfolio actually invests in is impossible. I’ve tried numerous times and cannot get a portfolio breakdown. Not even the %age exposure to real estate. Maddening!

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tomsmithidg
Added a month ago

Everyone is gonna boo me here mate, but I don't think you can go wrong with the Big 4 Banks (not CBA - dividends are too small). Collect your safe 4%+ dividends tax free in pension stage, then get the extra 30 cents on the dollar franking credit refunded to you at tax time. Support that with whatever US dividend aristocrats you are partial to (I recently added CLX to my existing stable of KEY, MO, T and VZ) paying ballpark 5%+ dividends, now is not a bad time to buy with the AUD above 70 cents US and those companies mostly below long term average prices. Enjoy the currency kick once Albo and his band of merry retards tanks the Aussie dollar again. They also mostly pay quarterly which smooths out the income delivery. There is a tax treaty with the US for Superannuation which gives you a reduced, I think around 15%, tax on dividends over there. Depending on your risk profile, further supplement with some higher returning 100% franked dividend Aussie stocks, everyone here knows I'm bullish on WDS, even at today's close $31.04, it is returning 5.32% dividend before franking credits. Odds are profits are going to be better with everything happening at the moment, which could result in a higher return for 2026-27. Maybe a small percentage punt on big likely recovery stocks like TWE, and/or a Gold Prospector.

Boring as batshit, but safe as houses. That's my 2 cents. Best of luck mate!

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mikebrisy
Added a month ago

@Chagsy they are mostly global, investment grade corporate bond index funds. Their role is simply to provide some dampening to equity volatility, through being (mostly) uncorrelated. Totally passive and I know they are diluting my long term expected returns, but there you go.

I know very little about fixed income, so a major consideration is low fees.

Probably should have gone 100% equities.

The entire portfolio was set up in 2017, and the equity element has done very well indeed.

I would not be living the life I can based on my Strawman portfolio returns!!!

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Tom73
Added a month ago

Well @Chagsy I hope I can offer some silver lining to the clouds your seeing – they are big but like all clouds they will eventually go away and the sun return.

Some thoughts on the many points and issues you raise:

  • You have a lot longer to live than this “crisis” – The conventional wisdom that when people retire they should avoid any risk (ie mostly go to cash/fixed interest) is ridiculous when on average you have 20years+ to live. So provided you have a year or two of cash/fixed interest, I see no reason not to in equities (ie so called high risk) for the rest, in fact most people have to if they are going to earn enough to get through the next 20 years. So the current market dip should be looked at just like any other prior to you retiring – don’t panic. Note if you have dividend stocks, the dividend payments hold up very well even in prolonged periods of market and economic downturn which helps with cash needs if your not earning income.
  • Interest rates fear campaign – the RBA should be looking through any inflationary impact of the current oil price surge, for several reasons. They may still increase rates, but it should have nothing to do with the current oil price, so they may do it for other reasons. Interest rate policy is slow acting and based on data that takes a long time reveal what is happening, plus it is a very blunt instrument that is focused on general demand and takes a long time to impact the economy. The oil issue is potentially short term, is a supply side issue and if it increases prices, it will dampen general demand, effectively doing the RBA’s job for them. If the oil price becomes a long-term issue, that may be different (it may increase inflationary expectations), but no one (not even so called super geniuses like Trump…) knows if it will, so making slow acting long term interest rate decisions based on what we currently know is madness.
  • Holding is buying – a mental approach to seeing the price of investment you hold drop considerably but still think are good companies but can’t buy more is to take the view that by not selling you are in effect choosing to buy your portfolio every day you hold. The lower the price of a stock the lower the risk, provided nothing else has changed – so you are now holding lower risk positions in good companies. Just do your diligence to confirm your reasons for investing hold.
  • World Oil supply – If the SoH never opened again this would still be less of an issue than the Opec crisis of the 70’s, and you lived through that and it ended without the world ending. The reasons are many, firstly the world is less oil depended, the second is the US is now a major producer and self-sufficient, the third is there is a lot more capacity and options than 50 years ago (alternat supply will take time to come on line but there is a lot of options). I am not downplaying it as a major issue in the short term, just not the irreparable long term catastrophe the media is trying to play it as – there will be pain but it’s not fatal or permanent.
  • Opportunity mindset – I like your approach to look for opportunities in the current situation, if you have a cash buffer to protect from volatility then an offensive mindset in times like this can be very rewarding long term. Those opportunities will be where the fear is greatest and short termism is strongest. As “retail” investors this is an area we can shine – looking long term and doing our due diligence to understand deeply what is actually happening rather than what is being shouted about loudest is where we get market beading returns.


For almost 10 years I have been effective semi-retired and almost totally dependent on investment returns for our family income (2 kids still at home). I say this to let you know I understand how “extra” hard a market downturn or major macroeconomic issue can be to deal with mentally. 2021-22 was a very hard period for me and what I was investing at the time, so I have been there (and no doubt will be again).

Find some source of hope to address the mind set issues, but then objectively review your portfolio and investments you are thinking about making. Have patience and remain focused on how things look beyond the noise. It’s hard, but I have seen the effect of doing this and not doing it over the last 10 years and the difference in results is profound.

Good luck and all the best

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Rick
Added a month ago

@Chagsy Yes the current political instability and macro outlook concern me a lot. Like you, my wife and I are totally dependent on investments for income: shares, property and cash.

We have already deployed all the cash we feel comfortable with into the market at this point. From here I think we will bunker down in anticipation of a long haul ahead with our remaining cash, incoming dividends/franking credits, and rental income.

Recently we added significantly to our Credit Corp holding. Credit Corp do well when things get tough. They haven’t done well in recent times because the economy has been strong and there has been limited availability to debt ledgers which is where they make their money. This is already starting to turn in the US.

I am not hoping for the economy to decline so Credit Corp can do well. Far from it! Most of our portfolio benefits from a strong economy.

Credit Corp pays a very solid dividend, which is likely to be 7% fully franked in FY26 (10% yield) going on Friday’s close ($10.78 per share, near a 12 month low). If we had more cash we felt comfortable deploying, I would be adding more Credit Corp shares on Monday, ahead of the stock going ex/div on Tuesday this week.

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mikebrisy
Added a month ago

@Rick I’ve noted with interest your work on $CCP. I have held historically, but not for a few years now.

Im curious as to how you viewed their FY24 writedowns, driven as I understand by sector weakness, meaning their assumptions for recovery of debt ledgers purchased in FY22 and FY23 was optimistic.

I ask because, although their experience was shared by sector peers, $CCP was hit relatively harder.

I guess I’ve been scared off them because I don’t know whether they’ll be shown to repeat the issue, if macro turns against them.

Am interested in how you have viewed this.

Disc: Not held.

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Rick
Added a month ago

I need to look into this more @mikebrisy. Not today though, we have visitors arriving soon!

I believe there is a sweet spot for CCP, they need access to well priced debt ledgers, but then the economy needs to good enough for debtors to repay their loans. They don’t flourish in a really bad economy either because they can struggle to recover debts.

To this point, I have been trusting in management’s FY26 guidance.

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RogueTrader
Added 2 weeks ago

TACO time:

"U.S. President Donald Trump ​told aides ‌he is willing to end ​the military ​campaign against Iran even ⁠if the ​Strait of ​Hormuz remains largely closed and leave ​a complex ​operation to reopen it ‌for ⁠a later date, the Wall Street Journal ​reported ​on ⁠Monday, citing administration officials."

https://www.reuters.com/world/us/trump-tells-aides-he-is-willing-end-iran-war-without-reopening-hormuz-wsj-2026-03-31/

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Schwerms
Added 2 weeks ago

Could be another stupid Trump trick,he says : think I'm going to pack my toys up and go home, 12hrs later marines on Kharg island.

Trump : "We have the best marines, the most beautiful marines, strong marines, they are taking Kharg island, beautiful Kharg island it's all ours god bless America and the troops etc etc etc "


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Lewis
Added 2 weeks ago

I think he's been looking for an off ramp since the Strait closed, not even he is pig headed enough to think collapsing the global economy is a good move. Also, money talks and lots of important people who have his ear will be scared of loosing lots of money. He doesn't need a win or a strategic outcome, just a barely plausible narrative that he made a good "deal". I think it's waiting on Iran to decide they've extracted enough pain, then some meaningless concessions both ways and Donny can claim art of the deal saved the day. Waiting for Iran's pragmatic side to come to the fore, and hoping Don doesn't get talked or tricked into throwing the toys out of the cot and doubling down. It's by no means a certainty, but I can see some light at the end of the tunnel (here's hoping it's not the train).


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RogueTrader
Added 2 weeks ago

From the AFR:

ASX rises 1pc on Trump’s Iran war remarks; Koala rallies 12pc on debut

Matt Bell

Australian shares snapped earlier losses to turn higher on Tuesday on reports that US President Donald Trump is prepared to end the Iran war even if the Strait of Hormuz remains largely closed.

The S&P/ASX 200 Index reversed an intraday fall of 0.5 per cent to 8410.60 to last be up by 83.60 points, or 1 per cent, to 8544.60 at 2.09pm AEDT. Gains on Tuesday were led by a rebound in tech stocks along with the major banks.

The benchmark, however, remains down by 7.1 per cent, which at present would be the worst month since June 2022, when it fell 8.9 per cent.

US futures rose by 1 per cent ahead of Tuesday’s opening after The Wall Street Journal reported that Trump has told aides he is willing to end the military campaign against Iran even if the Strait of Hormuz remains largely closed and leave a complex operation to reopen it for a later date.

The prospect that the conflict could wind down sparked a reversal in Brent crude, which was last down by 1.1 per cent to $US106.19 a barrel. It remained on track for the biggest monthly gain on record.

VanEck deputy head of investments and capital markets Jamie Hannah said that the sharp turnaround in markets are indicative of the volatility we’ve experienced this month.

“Comments coming out of the US and developments in the war with Iran have taken the limelight away from AI disruption and private credit issues,” he said.

“After a month of headlines moving sharemarkets lower and bond yields higher, there is a realisation that unless things change course then there will be wide-ranging global economic implications associated with the war.”

Tech stocks rebounded after heavy selling on Monday as bargain hunters returned. Xero rose 8.4 per cent, WiseTech Global 5.9 per cent and TechnologyOne by 4 per cent.

Banks were mixed despite offering heavyweight support as Westpac added 2.1 per cent, Commonwealth Bank 1.1 per cent, and ANZ 1.1 per cent. National Australia Bank gained 0.9 per cent.

Gold rose by 1.4 per cent to $US4546 an ounce, with the Federal Reserve saying long-term US inflation expectations appeared to be in check even as the war escalated in the Middle East. This helped gold miners, with Newmont up 3.1 per cent and Northern Star by 4.9 per cent.

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Seymourbutts
Added 2 weeks ago

Must've managed to find a secure place for the Epstein files over the last 4 weeks....

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RogueTrader
Added 2 weeks ago

The latest thoughts from the guys at Intelligent Investor:

Stock Take: The unreasonable whack job edition

Join John, Graham and Nick as they discuss the opportunities in the sectors unreasonably hit by AI fears, as well as Graham's love for The World Game.

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RogueTrader
Added a week ago

An interesting article on LiveWire from Auscap pointing out discrepancies between the ASX 20 and the ASX 200 (They're particularly keen on LOV, NCK, AUB and SDF):


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Undervalued ASX stocks from the recent market dislocation - Tom Stelzer | Livewire

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RogueTrader
Added a week ago

I blame the Orange Man:

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Chagsy
Added 2 months ago

A timely article from the Economist about portfolio construction for the retail investor. I know others are comfortable using derivatives, but I have the distinct feeling I would make some catastrophic beginners error and lose an arm and a leg.

I’ve been exploring Australian Government inflation linked bonds and global infrastructure ETFs as a way to give me some AUD income and capital protection plus some currency hedged income for spending overseas during early retirement. I’m still dithering, I mean carefully assessing my options.

Perhaps the outlined plan, below, is simpler; and kind of what I’m doing already.

On February 8th sports fans watching the Super Bowl, an American-football game, will be treated to an advert for Claude, an artificial-intelligence chatbot. Those viewers who are investors with long memories might feel an unsettling sense of déjà vu. The Super Bowl held in 2000 passed into market folklore as the epitome of internet-stock mania: no fewer than 17 “dotcom” firms paid millions of dollars each for 30-second advertising slots. Within weeks share prices had fallen into a brutal bear market.

Back in the present investors’ confidence in today’s emerging technology—AI—has already begun to wobble, just as companies prepare to spend jaw-dropping amounts of money to develop it. Over the past fortnight Alphabet, Amazon, Meta and Microsoft have said they will spend a combined $660bn on AI in the coming year. Investors who a year ago might have cheered such plans are getting cold feet. Each firm’s stock price has fallen since its announcement. Meta’s shot up but then tumbled below where it had been. Microsoft’s is down by 18%

It is no wonder that markets feel jittery. Everyone knows that shares are expensive—especially in America, but increasingly elsewhere, too. When stock prices are high relative to underlying earnings, expected returns are low and shareholders have more to lose from a crash. The trouble is knowing which other assets might offer refuge. The price of gold, investors’ time-honoured safe haven, has swung wildly in recent weeks. In recent days so has that of bitcoin, a digital pretender. Just as investors are searching for ways to hedge their equity risk, hedging opportunities seem few and far between.

The most obvious way to protect yourself from a stockmarket crash is to sell your stocks. Yet for most professional investors this is not an option. Some swashbuckling hedge funds can allocate their portfolios however they please, but most money managers face strict limits. When someone entrusts their capital to an equity fund, for example, they expect it to be invested in equities. Often, the portfolio manager’s mandate will prevent them from sitting on a pile of cash; if not, doing so would still invite angry calls from clients, followed by withdrawals. They can keep cash in their bank accounts, after all, without paying the manager’s fees.

Individual investors have no such restrictions, but selling up because stocks look pricey can still be a bad strategy. During the dotcom bubble, the valuation of the tech-heavy NASDAQ index relative to expected underlying earnings rose to multiples of its current level. In the five years to its peak in March 2000 the index suffered corrections of 10% or more on at least a dozen occasions. Any of these might have prompted the nervous to cut their losses. Over the same period, however, it ultimately rose nearly 12-fold. Even at the bottom of the subsequent plunge, investors who had simply bought at the start of 1995 and held on would have doubled their money.

A good strategy for hedging stockmarket risk is one that does not suppress returns too much on the way up, while cushioning losses on the way down. Sifting through the wreckage of the dotcom crash is a helpful way to think about how the various candidates might perform today. Broadly, they fit into three categories: the classic split between stocks and bonds; exotic strategies involving derivatives; and the use of alternative diversifiers for stocks.

For asset allocators with the freedom to do so, buffering stocks with bonds would have worked well during the late 1990s. The borrowing costs of rich-world governments were trending downwards as high inflation of the 1970s and 1980s faded into memory, granting windfall gains to bondholders (since prices move inversely to yields). From early 1995 to the NASDAQ’s March 2000 peak, Bloomberg’s index tracking the total returns from a basket of American Treasuries rose by nearly 50%. As share prices plummeted, central bankers slashed interest rates and bondholders benefited from falling yields again. As the NASDAQ fell from peak to trough, the Bloomberg Treasury index rose by another 30% (see top chart).

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It is not clear, however, that government bonds are still as useful for hedging equity risk today. During the last prolonged bear market, in 2022, both asset classes suffered together as inflation rose sharply and interest rates followed (see bottom chart). Ask investors today what might end stockmarkets’ bull run, and resurgent inflation—and the hawkish response it would require from central bankers—will top plenty of lists. That would mean share and bond prices falling in tandem once more.

Others will recall the short-lived panic that followed the unveiling of President Donald Trump’s “Liberation Day” tariffs last April. Then, for a brief spell, Treasuries and stocks also dropped together as investors worried that the White House’s erratic policymaking would endanger the bonds’ status as a haven asset. It is easy to imagine the next leg down in share prices being triggered by similar concerns, or by questions over the sustainability of rich-world governments’ vast borrowing. In either case, stocks and bonds would both be in the firing line

A second category of hedging strategies involves derivative contracts called options. These have long been used by hedge-fund managers and other professional investors, but are increasingly sold by retail brokers, too. “Overlaying” a stock portfolio with options allows an investor to harvest profits when share prices are rising, then to restrict their losses once the cycle turns

A “put” option on a stock, for example, confers the right but not the obligation to sell the stock at a pre-agreed “strike” price on some specified future date. If you also own the underlying stock, the effect is to cut off your potential losses beyond a certain point. Set the strike at 90% of the current price, say, and the option to sell at that strike means you cannot lose more than 10% of your initial holding. A put option on the S&P 500 share index that limits losses to 10% over the coming year currently costs 3.6% of the underlying amount to be protected. In other words, an investor who agrees to give up 3.6 percentage points of their returns can be protected from a crash.

The trouble is that the performance of such hedges depends heavily on the choice of strike price and expiration date. Analysts at Goldman Sachs, a bank, compared how two strategies using put options on the S&P 500 would have performed from 1996 to 2002. One involved buying a series of one-year options, each limiting losses to 10%; the other, a series of one-month options limiting losses to 4%. Though both would have offered protection as the dotcom bubble burst, costs would have snowballed. Overlaying a stock portfolio with the one-year options would only have resulted in roughly the same annualised return as an unhedged stock portfolio (albeit with less volatility). Overlaying it with one-month options would have generated a substantially worse return, despite the crash.

Some of the most effective hedging strategies the Goldman analysts found fell into the third category: combinations of stocks and non-bond diversifiers. In fact, the best diversifiers were mostly filtered baskets of stocks, such as the S&P 500 “low volatility” subindex, which includes the 100 least volatile stocks in the main index. A 50/50 split between this and the S&P 500 would, from 1996 to 2002, have generated nearly twice the annualised excess returns (over cash) of the S&P 500 index alone. So would a similar split with the S&P 500 “dividend aristocrats” index, which includes only companies that have increased their dividends every year for the past 25. Diversifying into “quality” stocks (with high returns on equity, stable earnings and low net debt) would have brought similar returns.

Today, the idea that the best way to hedge equity risk is with equities feels unsatisfying. Considering the alternatives, though, it might just be the best shareholders can do

16

Clio
Added a month ago

@Chagsy - the last alternative above - hedging growth equity risk with dividend-paying equities - is the strategy I settled on for my SMSF (now in pension phase). I set it up as 10% cash (half in TDs or similar for ready access, the other half in $ to cover the mandatary drawdown); 45% growth equities/mostly ETFs and 45% ASX dividend payers (banks, etc plus high yield ASX-ETFs). I set it that way about 18 months ago, and walked away - it was supposed to be pretty much set and forget. I've been pleasantly surprised by how well it's done in growing the capital while also generating cash via divies and tax refunds, AND importantly remaining amazingly steady during market gyrations. In total value, it does go down a bit, but not much more than 5% or so, and re-stabilizes quickly and continues to slowly chug on and up.

It's been a peace-of-mind blessing knowing the SMSF is taken care of. Leaves me free to play with the other PF with much less nervousness and a better frame of mind.

18

Rick
Added a month ago

Nice balance you’ve set up in your SMSF @Clio. We’ve found the same with our SMSF. It’s continued to grow as we draw down. We put back the maximum concessional super contributions at the same time. Most of our SMSF is in pension phase and the dividends and franking credits are staying ahead of the mandatory drawdowns at this stage. Mind you our SMSF portfolio has taken a 10% hit in recent months. We have more exposure to shares so this might be a warning to increase the cash component in future.

9
Chagsy
Added 2 months ago

Things are beginning to get interesting.

I have made a few shuffles to derisk my portfolio but nowhere near enough. Definitely went in too early and too hard on some quality growth companies, most painfully WTC. More positively my position in the quality/value ETF seems like a good one

The smallest big move has been to change my International shares tracker in Super to a fully hedged position. From what I’m reading the dollar is likely to be under pressure for some time and the slow moving money in passive unhedged US stock funds are likely to exacerbate the fall in FX adjusted returns.


21
Mujo
Added 3 months ago

A decent market outlook by JP Morgan - Eye on the Market

Talks on AI etc.

11

RogueTrader
Added 3 weeks ago

This may interest some - Marcus Padley explains why "The Iran Oil Shock is Worse Than You Think"

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