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Vanguard: 60/40 Portfolio Down but Not Out

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What You Need to Know

  • Even with its recent drubbing, the allocation’s longer-term performance isn’t far off trends.
  • While bonds have dragged down returns, it’s easier for them to pull their weight now that interest rates have moved higher.
  • Stock-bond diversification typically recovers within months, and investors haven’t encountered a three-year span of losses in both asset classes since 1976.

The traditional 60% stock-40% bond balanced portfolio may be down, but investors shouldn’t necessarily count it out, according to Vanguard investment strategists.

“What we would say is the 60/40 portfolio is not dead, it’s simply readjusting at this point,” Matthew Sheridan, senior investment consultant at Vanguard, said on a webcast Tuesday. 

In fact, he added, prospects for the 60/40 portfolio are better now than they were two years ago.

The 60/40 portfolio was down 17% year to date as of Friday, so any client concerns about its efficacy are valid, Sheridan said, noting the allocation has been hit by inflation at 40-year highs.

Much of that inflation was unexpected, and unexpected inflation is the Achilles’ heel of the 60/40 portfolio, he explained. 

Ed Saracino, senior portfolio specialist, strategy and development at Vanguard, noted the environment has been stressful for both equities and fixed income, an uncommon situation, with fixed income experiencing the most stressful conditions in 40 years.

Despite the stresses, inflation is being priced into holdings, Sheridan said, and “you suddenly are in a position when the traditional 60/40 portfolio actually looks attractive going forward.” 

Financial advisors can explain that it’s rare for stocks and bonds both to be negative for a six-month stretch. The condition “feels bad right now and it’s understandable,” but based on data covering 50 years, it’s very unlikely that the 60/40 portfolio will be negative in three years, Sheridan said.

“Our patience is being tested,” but investors need to be patient, he added.

Stock-bond diversification typically recovers within months, and investors haven’t encountered a three-year span of losses in both asset classes since 1976, according to Vanguard.

Even with its recent drubbing, the allocation’s longer-term performance isn’t far off trends, according to Sheridan. If the 60/40 portfolio had ended down 17% on Tuesday, the annualized return for the previous four years would be 6.5%, right below the portfolio’s historical average, he said.

The 60/40 portfolio wasn’t designed for short-term moves, according to Sheridan, who noted that Vanguard expects the longer-term negative correlation between stocks and bonds — with returns moving in opposite directions — to stay in place.

“There is good news in this rising interest rate environment,” Saracino said, citing attractive yields across fixed income segments. “We don’t know for certain when the pain is going to be over,” whether it will be days, weeks or months, but current yields are “very attractive,” he added.

Indeed, while bonds have dragged down returns for the 60/40 portfolio, it’s easier for them to pull their weight now that interest rates have moved higher, Sheridan noted.

The Federal Reserve’s tightening monetary policy aims to help fixed income assets produce returns that exceed inflation, which should provide a longer-term benefit, Saracino said.  Investors who want to take a credit risk should note that U.S. investment-grade corporate bonds are yielding close to 5% right now, he added.

International stocks present both an opportunity and a risk for investors, Sheridan said, suggesting that a 20% to 30% allocation within a portfolio’s equity holdings is a “really, really good place to be,” although it’s a tough conversation for financial advisors to have with U.S. clients. (Vanguard has taken a 40% strategic allocation in international stocks within equities.)

A shift toward value stocks and away from growth equities also might make sense now as investors favor near-term versus distant cash flows — another opportunity and risk — Sheridan said. With unexpected inflation wreaking havoc across asset classes, the odds may favor value outperforming growth, although “at some point, you’ll have to move back to growth,” he added.

Or there’s an easier option: keeping a balanced approach and focusing on client tax strategies and alpha rather than shifting back and forth and “opening doors for bad mistakes to occur,” Sheridan said. 

Vanguard now sees a greater than 50% chance that the U.S. economy will experience a recession next year, according to Saracino, who predicted it will be akin to the relatively mild and short recession after the dotcom bubble burst. He said he wouldn’t recommend that investors do anything based on Vanguard’s forecast for an economic slowdown.

(Image: Shutterstock)


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