Related Topics
Interest Rates , Investing , Stocks
     

Why the “60 / 40 Balance” May Be Hazardous to Your Portfolio

Notice the similar pattern between these two bond charts

by Bob Stokes
Updated: February 14, 2022

Financial advisors have long advocated a mix of 60% stocks / 40% bonds to cushion portfolios from downturns in the stock market.

The thinking is that stocks go up in the long-term, hence, that's where investors should allocate the most. At the same time, advisors acknowledge that stock prices can sometimes go down so "less risky" bonds will provide at least some protection.

The problem with this investment strategy is that bonds can go into bear markets too. Moreover, they can do so at the same time as stocks.

Let's review what happened during the Great Depression of the early 1930s. Here's a chart and commentary from Robert Prechter's 2021 Last Chance to Conquer the Crash:

Fig 12-2

The chart shows what happened to the Dow Jones 40-bond average, which lost 30% of its value in four years. Observe that the collapse of the early 1930s brought these bonds' prices below -- and their interest rates above -- where they were in 1920 near the peak in the intense inflation of the 'Teens.

Now, let's review more recent history. Here's another chart and commentary from the book:

Fig 12-3

This chart shows a comparable data series (the Bond Buyer 20-Bond average) in recent decades. Notice how similar the pattern is to that of 1915-1929. If bonds follow the path that they did in the 1930s, their prices will fall below the 1981 low, and their interest rates will exceed that year's peak of 16%.

Conventional analysts who expect bonds to move contracyclically to stocks in the months ahead may be in for a very unpleasant surprise.

Indeed, the financial pages are all abuzz about the prospects of higher interest rates or bond yields.

As this Feb. 10 CNBC news item notes:

The yield on the 10-year Treasury note jumped 8 basis points to hit a session high of 2.01%, the first time that the benchmark rate reached the threshold since August 2019.

Elliott Wave International has been preparing subscribers for higher yields for quite some time.

For instance, back in early March 2020, when the yield on the 10-year Treasury note was at a then record low 0.91%, our March 2020 Elliott Wave Financial Forecast said:

This is the first time that 10-year Treasury note yields have dropped below 1%... Investor ebullience is the only thing that allows for an embrace of no-yield debt. The tidal wave of risk assumption, however, may be turning.

In other words, prepare for higher yields.

Just a few months later, yields hit a bottom and have been trending upward ever since. Mind you, yields had been in a downtrend for some 40 years! Of course, higher yields mean lower bond prices.

All the while, the stock market has been trending lower as well.

Learn what Elliott Wave International expects next for both bonds and stocks as you follow the link below.

Turmoil in the Stock Market Has Way More to Go

At least, that's what the Elliott wave model strongly suggests.

As Frost & Prechter's Elliott Wave Principle says:

If indeed markets are patterned, and if those patterns have a recognizable geometry... certain price and time relationships are likely to recur. In fact, experience shows that they do.

Get insights into the "geometry" of the main indexes so you can prepare for the magnitude of the stock market's next move.

It's important to know that -- according to Elliott wave analysis -- the magnitude of the next price move will likely take even the most bearish of bears by surprise.

Follow the link below to get our forecast for the stock market now.


"Last Chance" Crash Protection Package

This package gives you the practical tools you need to survive and thrive in this fast-unfolding financial turmoil

You get the eReader version of Last Chance to Conquer the Crash; plus for 6 months, our flagship investor package, the Financial Forecast Service, keeps you updated on the current situation in the markets and the economy.

$414
Package Price

The "Last Chance" Crash Protection Package saves you $99!

Get the "Last Chance" Crash Protection Package

EXCLUSIVE

Forget the Fed -- Watch the Waves

The Federal Reserve, and to a lesser degree the European Central Bank, have dominated the conversation about interest rates lately. But watch our Interest Rates Pro Service analyst Ivo Zhelev apply textbook Elliott waves to forecast the price of the UK's Long Gilt -- and, by extension, UK interest rates -- without a single glance at central bank statements.

Why a U.S. Recession May Foil Economists’ Expectations

A recent survey reveals positive expectations for the economy by a group of "professional forecasters." Learn why you may not want to bet the farm on that expectation. This chart compares leading economic indicators around the time of past recessions with what's going on now.

Gold Mining Stocks Lead Gold Lower: What’s “Fundamentals” Got to Do with It?

In mid-April, gold mining stocks led by VANECK GOLD MINERS ETF turned down from one-year highs to 3-month lows in May. Gold followed, reversing from all-time highs on May 4 to multi-month lows on May 25. We don't need another "fundamental" explanation for why.