It’s a deeply ingrained investing maxim that risk and return go hand in hand: to get more return, you must accept more risk. So some investors may find it counterintuitive that the opposite is also true: you can take less risk and still beat the market over time. It’s a different way of defining investment success that leans on downside defenses in the pursuit of long-term goals.
Meeting investment objectives today requires a fresh mind-set. Investors have been facing an uncertain future of structurally higher inflation and interest rates since last year, when an increase in volatility rattled markets. Macroeconomic uncertainty often creates unstable market conditions that may deter investors from taking more risk to capture return potential.
That creates a troubling conundrum for many investors. Whether an individual saving for retirement, a pension plan facing funding gaps or an insurance company dealing with stiffer capital requirements and asset/liability-matching challenges, investors can’t tolerate wild market swings, let alone the prospect of losing money. They need their investments to go the distance.
Strategies that expressly target downside-risk reduction can address many of these needs. These solutions get their performance power from the simple mathematics of lower risk drag and compounding. Stocks that lose less in market downturns have less ground to regain when the market recovers, so they’re better positioned to compound off those higher returns in subsequent rallies. Over time, this gentler return pattern can end up ahead of the market.
A measure known as upside/downside capture helps explain how preserving capital in the near term can actually drive outperformance over the long term. Imagine a hypothetical global stock portfolio that captured 90% of every market rally and fell only 70% as much as the market during every sell-off. What would the long-term returns of this portfolio look like?
You might think it would underperform; it wouldn’t. As the display below illustrates, $100 invested in this portfolio in 1986 would have built up more than $4,541 in capital through 2022 and delivered a smoother ride through the ups and downs of the market. That’s approximately 2.8 times more capital than that generated by the MSCI World Index.
It’s not easy to build a portfolio that can capture more upside during market rallies than it loses during downturns over time. In this paper, we explain why the secret to delivering on the 90%/70% potential lies in finding high-quality stocks with stable trading patterns and attractive prices (QSP). It also requires the ability to nimbly adjust exposures as insights into fundamental attractiveness and risks change.