Fed rate hikes , Russia's war, and soaring energy prices have upended equities, crypto and bonds this year.Macro Hive 'sBilal Hafeez shared how investors should position themselves for this period.
The Fed's era of ultra-easy monetary policy has begun to unwind, and investors are debating how best to position for a series of rate hikes this year and next.
The US central bank raised its benchmark interest rate by 0.25 percentage points last week, and chairman
On top of that,
Bilal Hafeez, Macro Hive's head of research, told us how investors should arrange their portfolios, so a big down-day won't significantly reduce the value of their overall investments.
Hafeez is a former global head of strategy at Nomura, and a former head of multi-asset research and advisor to the CEO at Deutsche Bank.
He broke down what Macro Hive's investment preferences are when the Fed is raising rates:
- Underweight bonds and equities, and overweight cash and commodities.
- Modestly long crypto (adjusted for volatility, it has underperformed less than equities)
- In US equities, overweight homebuilders, large cap value, reopening trades, semi-conductors and financials (in the medium-term), underweight large cap growth and retail.
- In European equities, overweight financials.
Allocations to cryptocurrency should be made strategically, he believes.
"Recognizing that crypto has much larger swings than equities suggests your crypto positions should be smaller than your equity exposure," Hafeez said.
"But more important than sizing is to recognize when the market is in a fragile state, with a much higher probability of large losses. That time is now."
Markets have taken note of geopolitical tension and the energy price shock, Hafeez said, pointing to equities being down 6% this year, crypto down between 8% to 16%, and bonds down 5% to 10%. Only commodities are up this year – by a whopping 39%.
He noted these asset classes experience different price swings, so returns can be adjusted on the basis of volatility.
For Hafeez, cash and commodities might be the best investments right now.
"Therefore, for all the talk that, due to low yields, cash is a wasted investment and will not outperform inflation, it also will not lose you nominal value," he said.
"It is better to be flat than to lose 5-18% on bonds, equities and crypto. This also suggests that in inflationary environments, cash, along with commodities, may end up being the best investment as cash limits your losses and allows you to survive."
This recommendation is vastly different from hedge fund investor Ray Dalio, who called cash the "worst investment" as recently as December.
The chart below shows bonds have been the weakest performers in the current market cycle, followed by equities, then crypto.