Risk Parity: Past its Prime
This is a follow-on to our research on Adaptive Asset Allocation
Our last article described an Adaptive Risk Parity (ARP) framework for a stock/bond balanced allocation, and discussed the advantages and risks relative to traditional 60/40 approach. While ARP makes intuitive, logical and empirical sense as an allocation framework, there are long-term risks to this approach related to asset class regimes.
Stocks, bonds and other asset classes generally move through long periods of high total return followed by long-periods of low total return. While there is more contention about where we are in the long-term stock cycle, there can be little debate about whether we are closer to the end or the beginning of the long-term interest rate cycle.
The chart below from Mebane Faber’s great new(ish) series on Risk Parity demonstrates the long-term efficacy of a static version of the approach for a portfolio of stocks and bonds using long-term relative stock and bond volatility for allocations, and targeting the same long-term volatility as the 60/40 portfolio (10.44%). Notice that to achieve the same level of risk as a 60/40 portfolio, the risk parity portfolio must be levered by 160%.
Chart 1. Long-term risk parity with S&P 500 and 10-Year Treasuries, 1972 – 2012
While the performance of the static risk parity approach is better over the full period, Faber points out that the relative out-performance is sensitive to the start and end dates of the observation period. If we go back in time to mid 2000 and observe the relative performance over the first 28 years, we may have drawn a different conclusion.
Chart 2. Long-term risk parity with S&P 500 and 10-Year Treasuries, 1972 – 2000
Source: Mabane Faber, 2012
So what happened during the last decade to create such a massive disparity in returns? The next chart offers a clue: it plots the progression of interest rates since 2000.
Chart 3. 10-Year Treasury yield, 2000 – 2012
Source: FRED database
Clearly this has been an exceptional period for interest rates, as they have dropped by over 70% over the past 12 years, delivering almost 7.6% in total returns per year, compared with 0.80% per year for stocks.
The question is, with interest rates at or very near historic lows, and the relative return differential between risk parity and more traditional approaches at an all-time high, should we expect this approach to continue to dominate other approaches going forward? Or should we acknowledge that the best days for risk parity are probably behind us – and adapt?
Adaptive Asset Allocation (AAA)
In this article we will apply the integrated AAA approach described in our whitepaper to a more traditional stock and bond portfolio to create a resilient ‘balanced fund’ that is immune to the interest rate bias that represents the Achilles Heel of risk parity.
AAA uses estimates of returns, volatility and correlation for assets in a portfolio based on recently observed measures of these parameters, rather than long-term averages. These estimates are then integrated using a robust mean-variance optimization algorithm analogous to the equations described under the banner of Modern Portfolio Theory.
Estimates for returns and correlations are drawn from time series for each asset over a 6-month look-back horizon, while volatility is measured over a shorter 60 day horizon. Further, portfolio level volatility at each rebalance period is managed to a 10% target. Depending on the measured volatility of the assets, and the correlation between them, at each rebalance period, cash or leverage may be required to reach the volatility target. No yield on cash or cost of leverage is included for this illustration.
Chart 4. Adaptive Asset Allocation balanced portfolio, rebalanced monthly, 1995 – May 31, 2012
Max 200% exposure
You can see that the Adaptive Asset Allocation framework described in our whitepaper applies quite well to a typical balanced portfolio of stocks and bonds. To illustrate the adaptive nature of the program, the diagram below illustrates how the portfolio adapts its allocations over time based on changing momentum, volatility and correlation dynamics.
You can see that the starting allocation for June would have been 53.72% in stocks and 46.28% in bonds.
Also notice that, for the most part, the allocations do not stray too far from the Investment Policy Statement (IPS) guidelines for a typical balanced investor. Where deviations do occur, they are usually biased toward too much cash, and rarely last more than a month or two except during extreme situations like 2008.
Fortunately, many IPSs have enough flexibility in their guidelines to to allow for deviations from stated benchmarks over periods up to 3 months, and longer deviations are allowed with appropriate client consultation.
As a result, while portfolio flexibility is an important and central element of the AAA framework, the examples above demonstrate that it is constrained enough to make it a compelling and comprehensive alternative for traditional balanced clients.
Further, by allowing the portfolio to take on a limited amount of leverage at times of low asset level volatility and/or very low asset correlations in order to achieve the target risk budget, the ARP portfolio delivered a 27% improvement in absolute returns with the same level of portfolio volatility as the traditional balanced portfolio.
The Adaptive Asset Allocation framework offers a working solution for investors that provides strong returns with managed risk, a combination that substantially and positively skews the probability of success for investors, regardless of market outcomes.