Bank of America flags its top 6 investing ideas as it sees the 60/40 portfolio heading for a dismal decade
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The classic 60/40 investment portfolio could be headed for a decade of dismal returns, BofA said.
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The bank said it believed the 60/40 portfolio would record a loss of 0.1% over the next decade.
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Strategists outlined six “satellite” trades that they believe investors should consider instead.
A classic and widely touted investment strategy looks poised to deliver meager returns for investors in the coming years.
Forecasters at Bank of America said they think the classic 60/40 portfolio — an investment portfolio split between 60% stocks and 40% bonds — was likely headed for a yearslong stretch of weak performance.
The bank predicted the classic portfolio mix would return less than 1% next year after accounting for inflation, and that the portfolio would deliver a real loss of 0.1% over the next 10 years.
That’s partly because large-cap stocks in the US are likely to underperform after three consecutive years of stellar growth, the bank said.
“The math of history is tough: average returns for the S&P 500 after 3 years of >15% growth are 2.3ppt lower than the average annual return. Investors may need GDP & EPS surprises to avoid a seventh ‘lost decade,'” strategists on the bank’s Research Investment Committee wrote of the 60/40 portfolio.
“Given such an uncertain core, in our view it is a great time to add ‘satellite’ allocations to underappreciated regions, sectors, and investment themes,” they added.
The bank highlighted six satellite trades comprising what it thinks are the best non-consensus investing ideas going forward.
International small- and mid-cap value stocks have seen an annual return of 15% over the last five years. That’s on par with large-cap growth stocks in the US; however, international SMID companies have seen less volatility to the downside, faster earnings growth, and appear more attractive from a valuation standpoint, strategists said.
Quality stocks, typically defined as companies with strong financials and low debt, have been one of the brightest spots in the US market in recent years. Stocks in the category have outperformed momentum, growth, value, dividend, and small-cap stocks, Bank of America said, citing its analysis of returns dating back to 1996.
“US high yield presents the best opportunity in credit, with higher quality than loans or private credit, and enough duration to benefit from a Fed easing cycle, according to our strategists,” the bank wrote, adding that it expected high-yield bonds to outperform investment-grade bonds and loans next year.
