For more than a decade, global market volatility was generally constrained, largely attributed to the quantitative easing and low-to-negative interest rate policies of most central banks around the world. Combined with a bearish cycle across the broad spectrum of commodity markets, the global investment marketplace experienced one of the most prolonged equity bull markets ever. As happened many times before, this period of buoyancy ultimately resulted in higher inflation, being tackled now by governments and central banks globally. Investors are experiencing further uncertainties as geopolitics are combining with fundamental forces to keep elevated volatility across a wide array of market sectors. In periods of such volatility, particularly coinciding with a period of exceedingly high equity/bond correlation, clients may be looking for an alternative investment which may not only provide diversification and potential portfolio protection to market fluctuations, but also potentially capitalize on increases in volatility.
Historically, managed futures investments have offered low correlation not only to traditional portfolio investments such as stocks and bonds, but to other alternative hedge fund investment strategies as well. Viewed as an absolute return alternative investment strategy, managed futures investments typically have a low beta to risky assets and are uncorrelated to long-biased hedge funds, private equity, and other alternatives. Moreover, managed futures have no inherent long bias to any asset class, and at periods may be short any number of markets. That could make managed futures an important part of a retail or institutional investor’s portfolio in the current environment which may continue for some time.
Managed futures investments have also historically performed well in periods of extended equity drawdowns. This “crisis alpha,” as it is often referred to, can offer a key component of portfolio insurance in such a period. This is represented by Display 1 which plots the performance of the Barclay CTA Index during periods of stock market drawdowns, as represented by the performance of the S&P 500 Total Return Index. Importantly, the periods of strong performance for the Barclay CTA Index coincide with S&P 500 bear markets, including recoveries to new “high water marks.”
Why the Current Macro Environment May Favor Managed Futures
The current global economic environment is exhibiting widespread volatility which has not been experienced in many years. Many of the current macro and micro impacts experienced by investors may not be transitory and, in fact, could persist for an extended period of time. Below is a partial list of some of the major fundamental drivers of the volatility we are currently witnessing.
While certain volatility can be a potential danger to a traditional portfolio, it may also provide trading opportunities for the “right” investment vehicle. Looking forward into the remainder of the year and beyond, there are a number of factors that could point to longer-term volatility that managed futures investments have historically been able to profitably capture.
Since the COVID pandemic, the interplay between inflation and central bank reaction has dominated market focus, pushing the correlation between equities and bonds to historical highs. As of December 31, 2023, the 36-month correlation between S&P 500 Index (TR) and Bloomberg U.S. Aggregate Bond Index (TR) was at its highest level since 1992, as represented by Display 2.
When monetary policy is the primary source of uncertainty, markets focus on liquidity. As market expectations of monetary policy direction change, whether tighter or looser, it has the same directional impact on all financial asset pricing. Conversely, when global growth is the primary driver of uncertainty amidst stable monetary conditions, we would expect to see negatively correlated price action. For example, strong growth expectations driving equities higher, and bond yields up.
We believe that the market preoccupation with monetary policy globally is likely to remain for some time. Further, if the market remains primarily focused on monetary uncertainty, we believe the bond/ equity correlation is likely to remain positive. Given this, we also believe that managed futures can potentially provide diversification to other assets and strategies as shown by Display 2.
Of course, if the market shifts its focus toward real growth as the monetary policy turns consistently and transparently looser, then a reversion lower in the correlation between stocks and bonds is possible. In that case, managed futures as an investment strategy can still have the potential to capture alpha.
Currently, we see drivers of inflation volatility still arising from a tight labor market, deficiency of housing supply and solid overall economic growth, at least in the U.S., while the interest rate policy remains uncertain and lacking a significant degree of transparency. In terms of the global real growth outlook, a combination of risk around election cycles and their fiscal implications, geopolitical risk, more frequent trade and industrial policy interventions should all serve to keep volatility elevated, including occasional regime shifts.
In short, the combination of high bond/equity correlation, a high and volatile cost of capital, and ongoing policymaker-induced volatility should bode well for dynamic, diversified, multifactor, liquid trading approaches like those employed by the managers in managed futures investments.
INFLATION UNCERTAINTY STILL HIGH
RECESSION EXPECTATIONS HAVE SUBSIDED BUT UNCERTAINTY STAYS
GLOBAL GEOPOLITICAL INSTABILITY
GLOBAL CONUNDRUM ACROSS ENERGIES AND OTHER COMMODITIES
These are just a few of the themes that can potentially create investment opportunities for a strategy like managed futures. Uncertainties, whether economic, political, social, or weather-related, will continue to support heightened volatility. Historically, managed futures investment strategies have capitalized on such environments which feature prolonged volatility, adding diversification to a portfolio in different market environments.
MSIM's Managed Futures Investment Team: | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
PATRICK EGAN
Executive Director
Head of Managed Futures Group
|
SRDJAN TESLIC, PH.D.
Executive Director
Chief Investment Officer
|
SCOTT DUNLAP
Vice President
Portfolio Manager
|
MSIM's Managed Futures team, which has roots dating back 40-plus years, specializes in providing high net worth and institutional investors access to multimanager investment solutions. In our view, an allocation to managed futures is an essential component of a well-diversified portfolio. Over the long term, we believe these strategies provide important diversification benefits versus other traditional and alternative asset classes.
For more information, please contact the MSIM Alternative Investments Hotline at (212) 296-7676.