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Portfolios


IS THE 60/40 PORTFOLIO A GOOD INVESTMENT NOW?

Why the outlook for the 60/40 portfolio isn’t as bleak as some claim.

Jason Kephart
Oct 25, 2023
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The classic balanced portfolio of 60% U.S. stocks and 40% U.S. bonds has
rebounded from its worst year in more than a decade but remains besieged by
naysayers and doubters. While there are lessons to be learned from the
portfolio’s sharp stumble in 2022, valuations point to better times ahead for
the old-school portfolio.


HOW WE GOT HERE

In 2022, the 60/40 portfolio[1] suffered its worst year since the 2008 global
financial crisis. The malefactor was rampant inflation. First, it forced the
U.S. Federal Reserve to aggressively hike interest rates, laying waste to
intermediate-term bond portfolios such as those that track or benchmark
themselves to the Bloomberg US Aggregate Bond Index. Higher interest rates
forced a repricing of the stock market, especially for companies with high
valuations relative to peers. With both stocks and bonds suffering losses, the
portfolio lost its characteristic “balance” and fell more than 20% from peak to
trough in 2022, before rebounding in the latter half of the year to finish with
a loss of just under 16%. This year, it has delivered about a 7% return through
the end of September, but that hasn’t quieted its detractors.

ANNUAL RETURNS OF THE 60/40 PORTFOLIO

2022 was the worst year for the 60/40 portfolio since the great financial
crisis.

Data as of Sep 30, 2023 Source: Morningstar Direct


A LOOK AT THE 60/40 PORTFOLIO′S VALUATION SHOWS A RETURN TO MORE NORMAL
VALUATIONS

The 60/40 portfolio’s valuation looks better after 2022′s drawdown and interest
rates continued climb in 2023; they’re more in line with historical norms after
hitting a nearly 30-year peak in late 2021.

To measure the valuation of the portfolio, we used two forward-looking metrics
dating back to mid-1995, the earliest the data was available. For the stock
portfolio, we looked at the forward price/earnings ratio; for the bond
portfolio, we looked at yield-to-worst.



Forward P/E ratios are the consensus best guess for what company earnings will
be in the future. It’s a good way to capture the growth expectations that are
priced into the market. Like any good crystal ball, however, it only offers
hints at the future, never fully revealing what’s to come. Nonetheless, lower
forward P/E ratios are generally better starting points than higher forward P/E
ratios.

Bond investors are stereotyped as being more pessimistic than stock investors
and always focusing on what could go wrong. Yield-to-worst captures that
paranoia better than other data points. It calculates the lowest yield an
investor can expect if factors that befuddle basic bond math like call
provisions and prepayments come into play. The higher the yield-to-worst is, the
more attractive that basket of bonds is, and vice versa.

Since the two metrics move in opposite directions, we asset-weight each ratio
(60% forward P/E and 40% yield-to-worst) and subtract the yield-to-worst from
the forward P/E ratio. For example, at the end of September, the forward P/E of
the S&P 500 was about 19 and the yield-to-worst for the Aggregate Index was
5.37. So we calculate ((0.6*19)-(.4*5.37)) and get 9.28. That number on its own
is useless, but it allows us to compare how the valuations of the 60/40
portfolio have changed over time and how it compares now. The chart below shows
how many standard deviations the valuation of the portfolio has been above or
below its mean.

ROLLING VALUATIONS

How the valuation of the 60/40 portfolio has compared to itself over the
long-term.

Data as of Sep 30, 2023 FactSet, Bloomberg, Author's Calculations

This calculation, typically called a z-score, shows the 60/40 portfolio looked
more expensive at the end of 2021 than it at any point in nearly 30 years,
surpassing the previous high of the early 2000s dot-com bubble. It has since
collapsed as rates have risen, making the bond portfolio more attractive, and
stocks continue to trade under recent valuation peaks.



The cheapest the portfolio got in our study was October 2008, four months before
the bottom of the global financial crisis. That’s when analysts predicting
corporate earnings were their most pessimistic.


LOWER VALUATIONS HAVE TYPICALLY LED TO BETTER FUTURE RETURNS

It’s a fool’s errand to try market-timing a core holding like the 60/40
portfolio (and most investments), but keeping valuations in mind can help set
expectations and keep investors from hurting their results by buying and selling
at the wrong times.

Morningstar’s role in a portfolio framework recommends a holding period of six
to 10 years for a balanced fund, so we looked at the average seven-year returns
(a common time frame for a full market cycle) based on the starting valuations.
We also looked at the average three-year returns because we know it is too
tempting to not think shorter-term sometimes. The average seven-year return was
6.79% annualized over the time period and the average three-year return was
7.55% over the period. Exhibit 3 shows that returns varied depending on whether
the portfolio started at a higher- or lower-than-average valuation point.


LOWER VALUATIONS LEAD TO BETTER RESULTS


Source: Morningstar Direct, author's calculations.

In general, the portfolio performed better when starting at a cheaper valuation,
but that hasn’t always been the case. Its worst three-year performance, for
example, was a 7.24% loss from March 2006 through February 2009 when the
portfolio was almost 1 full standard deviation cheaper than the mean. That
period captured the equity market’s peak before the financial crisis in October
2007 and the entire fall up to March 2009.



Given the portfolio is still above the long-term median valuation, investors may
want to temper their expectations and plan for something less than the long-term
average returns. But that doesn’t mean they should shun the portfolio. Like any
good valuation metric, this one works best at the extremes. Exhibit 4 shows the
range of returns when the valuation is more or less than 1 standard deviation
from the mean.


EXTREME VALUATIONS ARE MOST TELLING


Source: Morningstar Direct, Author's Calculations.

It shows that the worst outcomes happened when the portfolio was trading at more
than 1 standard deviation above its mean; it traded above 2 standard deviations
from the mean for most of 2021 right before the 2022 drawdown it has yet to
recover from.


LONGER HOLDING PERIODS IMPROVE THE CHANCES OF SUCCESS

There is one thing investors can do to improve their odds of success with a
60/40 portfolio: Hold it longer.

We used the historical returns dating back to October 1995 in a Monte Carlo
simulation to calculate the odds of the portfolio losing money over different
periods.

THE ODDS ARE IN YOUR FAVOR

The risk of losing money in a 60/40 portfolio greatly diminishes the longer you
own it.

Data as of Sep 30, 2023 Source: Morningstar Direct, Author's Calculations

Over one year, there’s about a one in five chance of losing money, but over 15
years the odds drop to less than 1%. There’s no guarantee that a 1% chance of
loss won’t happen or won’t be painful, but it confirms Morningstar’s
recommendation to hold the portfolio for longer periods.


WHAT’S THE OUTLOOK?

Rising interest rates continue to pose a near-term risk for the 60/40 portfolio,
but it is designed to deliver over longer periods. Based on the most recent
valuation, the portfolio looks slightly more expensive than the norm, but not
overpriced. So investors should check expectations but don’t have to check out.

[1] For the purposes of this article, we are using 60% S&P 500 and 40% Aggregate
Index, rebalanced monthly, for the basic 60/40 portfolio.

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The author or authors do not own shares in any securities mentioned in this
article. Find out about Morningstar’s editorial policies.


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