Protecting portfolios in time of Covid-19

21 Aug, 2020 - 00:08 0 Views
Protecting portfolios  in time of Covid-19 The potential for shocks and unintended consequences is higher . . . you need to consider how a portfolio would perform during certain conditions of stress: Iain Power of Truffle Asset Management. — Image: Shutterstock

eBusiness Weekly

Patrick Cairns
Three local boutique managers share their thoughts on gold, options and more.

It seems unlikely that the volatility in markets due to the Covid-19 crisis is over. The VIX (Volatility Index) in the US is down to its lowest levels since late February, but there are good reasons not to be complacent.

“Given the speed of the rebound in markets, and our concerns in terms of what’s happening from a real economic point of view, we have felt that it’s prudent to have some protection in portfolios to the extent that there are some tail events we could see in the second half of the year that could result in higher volatility,” said Iain Power, CIO and portfolio manager at Truffle Asset Management during a recent panel discussion hosted by Asset TV.

These include the US election, ongoing trade tensions between the US and China, and the risk that the economic recovery may be neither as strong nor as quick as people hope.

For asset allocators, it’s important to consider how best to protect against these kinds of uncertainties.

Options

“At the beginning of February we had put options on the S&P 500 in our funds with global mandates, and that worked really nicely in the first quarter,” said Robert Oellermann, director and portfolio manager at Tantalum Capital.

“We sold those, but reinstated the bulk of that position actually a bit early.

“We also still carry a fairly healthy cash allocation in our balanced funds. We think we’re in for a bit of a bumpy ride ahead.”

For Jacques Conradie, MD at Peregrine Capital, options are, however, not that attractive at the moment.

“We like protection when it’s very cheap,” he said.

“In February you were getting super value for money, and at that stage we had protection on half of our funds. But now premiums are much higher. Currently, we don’t have put option protection in place given the high volatility.”

Precious metals

However, Peregrine still thinks that having downside protection is important.

“Currently our best idea for how to do that is through owning some gold in our portfolios,” said Conradie.

“We think it has a great track record of being negatively correlated to overall markets.

“Gold is still a very small portion of the average portfolio, and we think there is a lot of scope for people to realise that they could hold 2 percent or 5 percent or even 10 percent. They will come to a different answer depending on their risk appetite and how they view the asset class, but we think you need to hold gold when rates in all developed markets are zero. It offers good protection against geopolitical risk, and so for us it is a better hedge.”

Oellermann sees value in holding gold shares, and believes that platinum could start to be seen more as a store-of-value trade.

“A fact about gold that I think is often overlooked is that if you take all the gold that has mined and add all reserves together, there is about $6 trillion of value in the world,” said Oellermann.

“Total global wealth is about $350 trillion. If you think about the amount of money printing going on, I think gold offers you disaster protection.

“If the cure for all ills is printing money and government handouts, which seems to be what Covid-19 has taught governments and central bankers, it’s not surprising to me that investors are trying to find assets that will protect their purchasing power down the line — something that is scarcer and cannot be printed.”

Liquidity

Truffle has had a favourable view of gold stocks for some time, having carried meaningful positions in its portfolios for the last three years. Power said it is one of the tools that asset allocators have when thinking about how portfolios will perform in different environments.

“Historically, investors have thought holding bonds is a measure of diversification,” he said.

“But four of five months back, bonds just didn’t protect you in that sort of environment. So you have to be thinking about taking protection in some areas perhaps you wouldn’t normally expect to build anti-fragile portfolios.

“We all believe that higher levels of volatility are here to stay. There are many tail risks in play in terms of geopolitical risks, money printing, negative real interest rates, and perhaps even negative nominal interest rates.

“All of these things suggest that the potential for shocks and unintended consequences is higher, and because of that you need to be thinking about how a portfolio would perform during certain conditions of stress.”

One thing Power believes should certainly not be under-estimated is the importance of liquidity.

“Liquidity gives you optionality, and the ability to do things,” he said.

“For smaller asset managers, volatility is in effect alpha. When you understand the price of an asset or the value of an asset and how the price moves around that, you have chances to arbitrage, but you need liquidity to do that.

“The landscape has fundamentally changed in the way the world is going to do business,” he added.

“Don’t be surprised when we have a lot of volatility, and don’t lock yourself into positions where you don’t have the option to change your mind.”

Patrick Cairns is South Africa Editor at Citywire, which provides insight and information for professional investors globally. This article was first published on Citywire South Africa here, and republished with permission.

 

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