But bad things can happen to investors when they try to read the Fed’s tea leaves instead of actually listening to what the Fed is telling them.
A short while ago (December 2023 to be exact), the markets predicted a combination of lower inflation and slowing economy would produce 6 rate cuts in 2024. Even though the Fed was publicly saying it would likely only cut rates three times in 2024, large sectors of the market heard “six.” Fast forward three months, and after some strong economic news (and well-reasoned Fed Speak), it appears that there is a low probability of a rate cut in March and perhaps as few as 3 rate cuts this year.
The bottom line is that it’s really hard to predict with any certainty or accuracy when the Fed will move, and by how much. And given that fixed income portfolios are especially sensitive to interest rate changes, you can end up taking on far too much duration risk based solely on bullish prognostications (that are at odds with the Fed’s own messaging to boot).
At City Different, we are total return investors. That means we take risk when we’re paid to take risk. In a fixed income portfolio, a major type of risk is duration risk. In simple terms, it means how price sensitive is a portfolio to interest rate changes. We break down our duration risks into three segments:
We position our portfolios in response to macro-economic trends to be sure, but strategically, we’re positioned in the neutral range about 67% of the time, whereas we’ll be bearish or bullish about 16.5% of the time each, respectively.
We accomplish our portfolio duration targets by utilizing a laddered structure. Using municipal bonds as an example, historically, a laddered structure outperforms1 the two other most common structures (bullet and barbell) 60% to 80% of the time (with lower turnover and reinvestment risk).
This might seem pretty simple, but sometimes the simplest things are often overlooked.
You can see examples of this in a non-investment context as well. Much as market anticipation is the name of the game when calculating duration risks, anticipation is also the hallmark of a goalkeeper’s approach to a penalty kick in soccer.
At least, you’d think it was.
But contrary to popular belief, it actually isn’t. The following table from Top Goalkeeper (citing this study) illustrates this:
The penalty kick actually comes down the middle more than it goes to either side, but the goalie only stays put about ~6% of the time… a huge behavioral inefficiency based on the underlying statistics. The same is true of bullish and bearish fixed income portfolios — we position ourselves there in narrow bands because we’re far less likely to actually experience those conditions.
The real key to both penalty saves and fixed-income portfolios is having a disciplined and well-tested philosophy… and sticking to it.
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