Our New Refrain: ‘First Time in A While’
January 31, 2023
We've fallen into a trap of ever-widening orbits of contact, and there is a total disregard for the present moment.
—Jerry Seinfeld
It seems like the world of trading and investing is full of adages. They’re not as creative as “festivus” or “anti-dentite,” but quips like, “Buy the rumor and sell the news,” and, “Sell in May and go away,” are a few that come to mind. One of those axioms that is particularly timely is, “The market has no memory.” This is one of those that is just true enough to make you ponder its validity.
As a systematic investing asset manager, we wrestle with this statement:
- On the one hand, it seems everyone pays attention to calendar year performance. Investors at all levels remember prior year rates of return, which can lead to biases and misplaced expectations. It is also well-established in the data that trends exist and can persist over long periods.
- On the other hand, you can look at the history of rolling or calendar year performance, and they appear to be completely random.
We think the best way to cut through this noise is to use a systematic investing process that is adaptable and not dependent on any one market environment for success.
In this month’s Co-Founders’ Note we discuss our own refrain – “first time in a while” – which captures how we are increasing exposure in certain asset classes for the first time in many months (or years). Using our systematic investing process helps us remain adaptive and nimble, eliminates our “memory” of the distant past, and focuses us on what is happening in the moment.
But first, here’s a summary of our take on what transpired in the markets in January.
Asset-Level Overview: Market Talking Points for Financial Advisors
Equities & Real Estate
U.S. large-cap equities continued to be range-bound in January, providing a positive return but ultimately failing to break the December high. Mid-cap equities challenged recent highs more strongly and performed better than their large-cap peers. Small-caps are arguably the strongest-performing segment of the three right now, as well as closest to having both intermediate- and long-term uptrends. Blueprint Investment Partners portfolios will increase exposure to all three but remain underweight versus the baseline targets.
Foreign developed equities emerged as the strongest equity asset class as of late and will move into an overweight status in our portfolios for the first time in years. The long-term trend is turning positive, joining the intermediate-term trend. This will be the first long-term uptrend since late 2021.
Emerging market equities came close to triggering uptrends in December, and the strengthening continued in January. Driven by China, this segment will experience an intermediate-term uptrend heading into February, and all Blueprint Investment Partners portfolios will see an exposure increase. The long-term trend remains negative for now but is making progress toward an uptrend that could come as early as March.
Real estate securities have been battered by interest rate hikes but also experienced an intermediate-term uptrend. The long-term trend remains negative. As a result, all our portfolios continue to be underweight, but exposure will again increase from the minimum allocation.
Fixed Income & Alts
Like their equity counterparts, multiple segments of the yield curve in U.S. fixed income have strengthened to intermediate-term uptrends. Longer-duration U.S. Treasuries are arguably the strongest, followed by intermediate-term, then short-term bonds. Blueprint Investment Partners portfolios will remain underweight overall but experience the first meaningful increases in some time.
Gold continues its steady climb from early November lows and is at its highest level since last summer. Exposure will increase from underweight to its baseline allocation, as the long-term trend joins the intermediate-term trend in positive territory.
Sourcing for this section: Barchart.com, S&P 500 SPDR (SPY), 1/1/2022 to 1/30/2023; Barchart.com, Midcap ETF Vanguard (VO), 1/1/2022 to 1/30/2023; Barchart.com, Smallcap ETF Vanguard (VB), 1/1/2022 to 1/30/2023; Barchart.com, FTSE Developed Markets Vanguard (VEA), 1/1/2021 to 1/30/2023; Barchart.com, Value ETF Vanguard (VTV), 1/1/2022 to 1/30/2023; Barchart.com, Growth ETF Vanguard (VUG), 1/1/2022 to 1/30/2023; Barchart.com, China Ishares MSCI ETF (MCHI), 1/1/2022 to 1/30/2023; Barchart.com, 20+ Year Treas Bond Ishares ETF (TLT), 1/1/2022 to 1/30/2023; Barchart.com, 7-10 Year Treasury Bond Ishares ETF (IEF), 1/1/2022 to 1/30/2023; Barchart.com, 3-7 Year Treas Bond Ishares ETF (IEI), 1/1/2022 to 1/30/2023; Barchart.com, 1-3 Year Treasury Bond Ishares ETF (SHY), 1/1/2022 to 1/30/2023; and Barchart.com, Gold Trust Ishares (IAU), 10/1/2022 to 1/30/2023
3 Potential Catalysts for Trend Changes: Giving Clients the Context
Big Data Week: Wednesday: The Federal Reserve is expected to hike rates 25 bps to 4.50-4.75%, which is in line with fed fund futures expectations. Thursday: We will hear from both the Bank of England and the European Central Bank. The first is expected to hike rates by 50 bps to 4% (a “surprise” of just 25 bps is expected by 13 of 42 analysts surveyed by Reuters), and the second is expected to go with a 50 bps increase to 2.5%. Friday: The U.S. Labor Department will release its January jobs report. In addition to those anticipated announcements, we will get key data on U.S. employment costs, job openings, factory activity, and productivity.
State of the Job Market: The labor market broadly improved across the U.S. last year. Every state added jobs in 2022, but the pace of gains varied widely. The national unemployment rate fell to a seasonally adjusted 3.5% in December, which matched the lowest reading in 50 years. Some states had significantly lower rates. Utah had the nation’s lowest rate at 2.2%, and North and South Dakota also pulled in sub-3% unemployment rates, along with several other states.
The Path Forward? Federal Reserve officials will meet this week to discuss how much more to lift interest rates both for this meeting and in the long run. Key to those discussions will be guessing how much their previous rate increases have already cooled growth and inflation. The Fed’s preferred inflation gauge, the personal-consumption expenditures (PCE) price index, rose 5% in December from a year earlier, which was the slowest annual gain since September 2021. The core PCE price index, which captures underlying inflation after removing volatile food and energy prices, rose 4.4% from a year earlier, its slowest pace since October 2021.
The Adaptability Of a Systematic Investing Approach
Realize deeply that the present moment is all you ever have. Make the NOW the primary focus of your life.
—Eckhart Tolle
Sourcing for this section: Barchart.com, FTSE Developed Markets Vanguard (VEA), 1/1/2017 to 1/30/2023; Barchart.com, S&P 500 SPDR (SPY), 1/1/2017 to 1/30/2023; Barchart.com, FTSE EM ETF Vanguard (VWO), 1/1/2027 to 1/30/2023; Barchart.com, 20+ Year Treas Bond Ishares ETF (TLT), 1/1/2021 to 1/30/2023; Barchart.com, 7-10 Year Treasury Bond Ishares ETF (IEF), 1/1/2021 to 1/30/2023; Barchart.com, 3-7 Year Treas Bond Ishares ETF (IEI), 1/1/2021 to 1/30/2023; and Barchart.com, 1-3 Year Treasury Bond Ishares ETF (SHY), 1/1/2021 to 1/30/2023
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