Structural changes in markets mean portfolio approaches, and the concept of defensive assets, must evolve to provide dependable income. The historical negative correlation between equities and bonds has become increasingly unreliable in recent years. What once looked like diversification now risks concentration.
This shift has been reinforced with recent geopolitical tensions, such as the Middle East conflict, where traditionally defensive assets have continued to react unexpectedly. In this evolving landscape, investors may need to consider alternative solutions, and contractual income streams provide a stable, reliable, and non-correlated alternative to increase portfolio resilience.
Key points
- The investment landscape has changed, and long-term structural trends are driving further transformation as economies adapt to new economic regimes.
- The historical diversification benefits of bonds are breaking down, with increased correlation between equities and bonds (move in same direction).
- Contractual non-correlated income streams offer a stable and predictable solution, unaffected by market volatility or traditional asset correlations.
Adapting to a changing investment landscape
The early years of the 2020s have reshaped market dynamics through policy disruptions, supply chain shifts, and challenges to social cohesion. The recent progression of technology and AI has only further accelerated this pace of change. Long-standing beliefs about markets and portfolios are being challenged, and in some cases, overturned, making the task of creating resilient portfolios significantly more complex.
Long-term trends are now driving further structural changes to the market through:
· Rising government debt as policymakers have shown little appetite for bringing public spending down from the highs reached in the COVID era.
· Shifting demographics as ageing populations are shrinking workforces and exacerbating government debt challenges.
· Disruption of labour markets as rapid advancements in AI are disrupting traditionally stable sectors of the employment market.
· Persistent inflationary pressures as lingering supply chain constraints, ongoing deglobalisation and geopolitical uncertainty suggest that inflation, and therefore higher-rates, might be here to stay after an extended period of near zero-interest rates.
In this economic environment traditional patterns are breaking down more quickly and correlations have become less predictable.
The decline of bonds as a reliable diversifier
For many decades, diversification strategies primarily focused on two asset classes: equities and bonds (60/40 portfolio). While the use of these assets has evolved over time, their role has formed a consistent foundation of portfolio diversification for many decades. However, for this strategy to work effectively, two critical factors must hold true:
1. A low correlation between equities and bonds.
2. Low volatility for bonds, given their role as a source of stability.
In recent years, these two pillars have eroded. The historical negative correlation between equities and bonds has weakened, and bond market volatility has increased. This shift has left investors grappling with how to build resilient portfolios in an environment where traditional defensive assets no longer behave as expected.