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An ominous pattern in portfolio allocations has been detected
Investor allocations to bonds have reached the lowest point since 2007.
We’ve seen this happen before.
Bond allocations reached major lows at both of the last two major stock market peaks (2000, 2007), and basically served as a bear market harbinger.
Aside from giving clues on the stage of the market cycle, this chart also served as a contrarian bullish indicator for bonds — with treasuries turning in strong double-digit returns after those two big troughs (and doing so while stocks dropped).
So I think this chart says as much about the stage of the market cycle, as it does about the importance of asset allocation (bonds performing their role as diversifiers and risk dampeners), but also about the big bullish setup in bonds in general.
As discussed the other day, bonds have all the makings for a contrarian bullish setup (cheap valuations, bearish sentiment, cycle-low allocations) — and, for now, lack only the technical and macro confirmation (the tactical/timing element).
In other words, don’t dismiss bonds in your asset allocation and portfolio strategy plans — and definitely don’t doubt their role as downside dampeners when the next big downturn comes.
Key point: Investor allocations to bonds are at an 18-year low.
Bonus Chart — The 2020’s Treasury Bear Market
Now, some of you might be thinking: hmm yeah, ok, but we just saw bonds crap the bed during the 2022 mini-bear-market; and both stocks AND bonds ended up falling during that episode. Then add to that the fact that bonds are still basically in a bear market, and it would not be at all surprising to see some push back on the above sentiments I espoused.
And that’s actually a big part of the story here.
Investors have been scared and scarred away from treasuries, particularly as stocks have gone from strength to strength. That’s a big reason for why sentiment is so bearish on bonds, and why allocations have been drifted by market movements and active rotation down to the lows highlighted in the chart above.
It’s all part of the process of the market cycle, but I’d also hasten to point out that back in late-2021 my indicators were showing bonds (and stocks) as expensive and inflation risk was rising in hindsight, there were clear clues that bonds would end up being a source of risk rather than a dampener of risk back then.
But now that things have reset, I maintain and reiterate my assessment that bonds have a greater chance of playing their usual diversification and risk-dampening role in the portfolio — especially in event of a deflationary downturn (recession).
So a fair bit to think about here, especially given the prevailing consensus…
