The Wisdom in Knowing You Know Nothing
March 31, 2022
The only true wisdom is in knowing you know nothing.
—Socrates
It is a common tendency for people to extrapolate recent events into the future as a permanent and continuing condition. This cognitive error shows up consistently in our daily lives and especially in the minds of investors. There’s nothing like the markets to push our buttons. So, what do our minds do with the fact pattern of the first quarter? U.S. equities experienced an all-time high, a -14% peak-to-trough drawdown, and a rip-your-face-off-type rally from the lows of nearly 12%. Now that’s a quarter!
Where do we go from here? At Blueprint Investment Partners, we rely on a systematic investing process to guide our decision making. No emotions, predictions, or guessing are part of that process. To execute that process flawlessly, it’s our view that we must accept the reality that we know that we don’t know. Doing so requires humility. In fact, if we don’t humble ourselves, the markets will most assuredly do it for us.
To us, executing our process in the “hot seat” requires a completely objective mindset. The irony is that, for us humans, that is nearly impossible. This is precisely the reason we rely on a set of rules to make our asset allocation decisions. Where do stocks go from here? No one knows or will they ever. For us, it’s about probability and attempting to put the odds of success in our favor over the long run.
In this month’s Co-Founders’ Note we discuss the need to be adaptable, especially when in the hot seat. Maintaining discipline in the face of uncertainty is in the job description of a professional money manager. How do we do it? By combining a good process with the necessary psychological ingredients to perform consistently over time.
But first, here’s a summary of our take on what transpired in the markets in March.
Asset-Level Overview: Market Talking Points for Financial Advisors
Equities & Real Estate
After twice challenging February lows in early March, U.S. equity markets staged a significant rally and surpassed February highs to re-establish uptrends across all timeframes that Blueprint measures. All of the major domestic cap levels and factors benefited, but many of those most negatively impacted prior to March – such as growth and tech stocks – recovered the most. Though more modest in their short-term returns, value and high-dividend stocks have increased enough to move into the black for 2022.
International equities were boosted by evidence of progress in ceasefire talks between Ukraine and Russia, but pressure on Chinese stocks kept emerging markets in the red for the month thus far. Both emerging and developed indexes remain in downtrends across all timeframes and are weaker than their U.S. counterparts. As a result, Blueprint continues to be underweight in all portfolios, as it has for many months now.
Fixed Income & Alts
It was another month, another poor performance from fixed income assets. The benchmark iShares Core US Aggregate Bond Index fell approximately 3%, pushing its year-to-date loss to around 6%. Global bonds fared even worse, declining more than 4% and dropping 2022 declines to approximately 8%. Even inflation-protected bonds continued their struggles after briefly rallying to begin the month. The result is that Blueprint will continue to take a win-more-by-losing-less approach, as it has for many months, focusing fixed income exposure to ultra-short-term bonds, which have held up quite nicely.
While essentially flat in March, gold continued to be a good diversifier for the month. It maintained uptrends across all timeframes and will remain at its maximum allocation in all Blueprint portfolios. The goal is for it to continue to act as a hedge against tail risk, both from an inflation and geopolitical standpoint.
3 Potential Catalysts for Trend Changes: Giving Clients the Context
Talk to me Goose: The bond market is currently pricing in an elevated step up in rate hikes, as the Fed continues to message a stronger reaction after recent data suggested inflation is accelerating. Implied Fed Funds rates for May, July, and November are calling for a 50bps hike for each of those meetings, with hikes also at the June, September, and January 2023 meetings. That would be at least eight more rate hikes this year and a Fed funds rate of 2.25% by the end of the January meeting.
Watch the Birdie! March’s Consumer Price Index (CPI) print, to be released April 12, could be the highest print for this cycle of headline inflation, with consensus estimates at 8.5%. Core inflation should also peak in tandem, with consensus estimates around 6.5%. This is primarily due to tough year-to-year comparisons. Monthly prints are still expected to run at a 4-5% rate, or higher, for at least the balance of the year, and current estimates are that we will end the year with core CPI around 4.5%-5%.
Because I was Inverted: The yield curve is the graphical representation of interest rates between three months and 30 years, which usually tends to slope upwards to reflect the greater risk inherent with longer-term bonds. The 30-year rate, one-year forward, has hit 68 basis points below the forward two-year rate; this is a level not seen in more than 30 years. Additionally, the one-year forward yield curve is fully inverted, where each longer rate is lower than the prior shorter rate. Currently, the bond market is estimating a recession with a summer 2023 due date and the first Federal funds rate cut in Q4’23.
Adaptability In The Hot Seat
During an environment that appears risky – like a pandemic, rapid inflation, or the threat of war when global equity prices are rapidly declining – it is easy to assume that we should be more defensive. However, just as quickly as things went from rosy a few months ago to correction territory, the opposite can occur and markets can rapidly make new highs. If that occurs, then the inverse emotion rapidly sets in, and fear transforms to FOMO.
—Us (yes, we did just quote ourselves!), in last month’s edition of this Note
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