Control What You Can, Remove the Rest
March 31, 2023
Grand strategy is the art of looking beyond the present battle and calculating ahead. Focus on your ultimate goal and plot to reach it.
—Robert Greene, “The 33 Strategies of War”
When someone asks us to describe our investment strategy, often the result is a conversation that’s less about strategy and substantially more around tactics. The two are complimentary, both are incredibly important, but they are certainly not interchangeable.
To us, the main difference between strategy and tactics is in the goal you are trying to achieve and the timeframe by which you are measuring success (or failure). Generating a comprehensive understanding of an investment strategy means establishing answers to three questions:
- What is the goal?
- What tactics are used to achieve the goals?
- Over what timeframes are the tactics operating, and what is a reasonable expectation for determining success or failure?
Strategies operate in an inherently longer timeframe than tactics, but on a daily basis we feel the tactics more. For example, it’s easy to lose sight of a long-term diet plan when you’re sitting in a Krispy Kreme (how do you say no to just one original glazed…I digress).
The goal of our strategy is simple: keep an investor’s rate of compounding at or near its highest point. The tactics we use to work toward this goal will depend on what the investment “ride” looks like, but the goal is clear. However, sometimes staying on the longer-term strategic path involves tactical pain in the short run. Our tactics are applied with a long-term view, which is why we believe you must be prepared to sometimes give up a little in the short run.
In this month’s Co-Founders’ Note, we consider both the bull and bear case for equities. We also highlight why our focus remains on controlling what we can control by being disciplined about our systematic investing process. In our view, focusing on a repeatable process and not short-term outcomes is how we will achieve the long-term strategic goals for our financial advisor partners.
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
Despite a crisis that shut down multiple banks and threatened many others, large-cap U.S. equities managed to produce a small but respectable gain in March. Given most of the banking stress focused on middle- and small-sized names, perhaps it is no surprise that mid and small caps fared much worse, resulting in significant decreases.
Interestingly, growth and technology led the way domestically while value, which generally has exposure to financial firms, underperformed.
As a whole, U.S. equities barely retained their intermediate-term uptrend status and continue to experience downtrends over the long-term timeframe. As a result, Blueprint Investment Partners portfolios continue to be underweight the baseline target.
Similar to U.S. stocks, international equities experienced a roller coaster but ultimately ended March near where they started the month. Developed markets managed to hold their uptrends across both timeframes, while emerging markets remained in downtrends. Obviously, developed markets remain much stronger, meaning Blueprint Investment Partners portfolios are tilted much more in that direction. In fact, developed markets continue to be at their maximum allocation, with emerging markets at their minimum.
Real estate securities continue to experience downtrends across both timeframes. In fact, they nearly repeated the 2022 low. A bounce in the last few days has created some distance from that low, but this asset class remains arguably the weakest right now. As expected, exposure in Blueprint Investment Partners portfolios remains at or near its low.
Fixed Income & Alts
Bonds have joined equities in a largely see-saw pattern by following February’s retracement with a rally in March. While not enough to even break the 200-day exponential moving average, the increases caused an intermediate-term uptrend. The result in Blueprint Investment Partners portfolios is an uptick in exposure, but exposure is still below the baseline allocation both in the U.S. and internationally.
After declining for almost all of February, gold staged a powerful rally in March, making a new 2023 high and producing strong returns. This asset class sits near a one-year high and continues to hold its uptrend status across both timeframes we monitor. All Blueprint Investment Partners portfolios are at their maximum allocation, and that will not change for April.
Sourcing for this section: Barchart.com, S&P 500 SPDR (SPY), 3/1/2023 to 3/30/2023; Barchart.com, Midcap ETF Vanguard (VO), 3/1/2023 to 3/30/2023; Barchart.com, Smallcap ETF Vanguard (VB), 3/1/2023 to 3/30/2023; Barchart.com, Growth ETF Vanguard (VUG), 3/1/2023 to 3/30/2023; Barchart.com, S&P 500 Technology Sector SPDR (XLK), 3/1/2023 to 3/30/2023; Barchart.com, Value ETF Vanguard (VTV), 3/1/2023 to 3/30/2023; Barchart.com, FTSE Developed Markets Vanguard (VEA), 3/1/2023 to 3/30/2023; Barchart.com, FTSE EM ETF Vanguard (VWO), 3/1/2023 to 3/30/2023; Barchart.com, Real Estate Vanguard ETF (VNQ), 1/1/2022 to 3/30/2023; Barchart.com, US Aggregate Bond Ishares Core ETF (AGG), 1/1/2023 to 3/30/2023; and Barchart.com, US Aggregate Bond Ishares Core ETF (AGG), 1/1/2022 to 3/30/2023
3 Potential Catalysts for Trend Changes: Giving Clients the Context
Last Hike? The Federal Reserve approved another 0.25% rate increase but signaled that recent banking-system turmoil might end its rate-rise campaign sooner than expected. The decision marked the Fed’s ninth consecutive rate increase and brings the benchmark federal funds rate to a range between 4.75% and 5%, which is the highest level since September 2007. Fed Chair Jerome Powell indicated that credit tightening from banks may further slow the economy and allow the Federal Reserve to pause on rate hikes in upcoming meetings, as they assess the damage done by recent banking failures.
Pointing Fingers About Bank Collapse: Senators criticized the Federal Reserve for failing to prevent the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank (SVB) despite identifying risks beforehand. The central bank’s top regulator blamed the bank’s executives for not fixing its problems. The Fed’s Vice Chairman for Supervision Michael Barr appeared before the Senate Banking Committee and defended the actions of the Fed’s supervisors. He indicated that the central bank had privately raised concerns with SVB before its collapse.
Inflation Abating: U.S. consumers were less worried about inflation in February than January. According to a recent survey by the New York Federal Reserve, expectations for price increases over the coming year fell to 4.2% from 5% a month earlier. They are down from a high of almost 7% in 2022. Three-year-ahead expectations held steady at 2.7%, down from a peak of 4%. Fed officials want to keep inflation expectations anchored close to their 2% goal, with some worrying that high and rising forecasts could become a self-fulfilling prophecy. Inflation is a measure the Fed tracks closely for setting the base federal funds rate.
Bear Case & Bull Case For U.S. Equities
There is a call for strategy every time the path to a given destination is not straightforward.
—Lawrence Freedman, “Strategy: A History”
Sourcing for this section: Barchart.com, S&P 500 Financials Sector SPDR (XLF), 3/1/2023 to 3/20/2023; S&P Global Market Intelligence, “Asset total in 2023 bank failures catching up to 2008, 3/13/2023; and Barchart.com, Total Stock Market ETF Vanguard (VTI), 12/1/2021 to 3/30/2023
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