Vanguard recommends commodities to combat sudden inflation
Vanguard recommends commodities to combat sudden inflation
Never thought I'd see the day. Gold bullion next month?
https://advisors.vanguard.com/insights/ ... 6632010697
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Re: Vanguard recommends commodities to combat sudden inflation
They have a commodities fund. They want to "nudge" readers to consider it.
Not that I want to buy it.
Not that I want to buy it.
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Re: Vanguard recommends commodities to combat sudden inflation
Commodities (chiefly oil) did well the last time there was sustained high inflation, in the 1970's. I would have to be convinced that they will perform as well if we get another round of serious inflation. Seems like the drivers are different now.
Re: Vanguard recommends commodities to combat sudden inflation
You are on their advisors page not their retail investors page. Vanguard is a business. They give their clients in this case advisors what they ask for. I would not confuse marketing material from any business such as Vanguard for advice specific to your situation. Finally although there may still be some debate and the future is unknown current inflation (2020/2021) is in large part due to shortages in the supply chain (e.g. computer chips but also other manufactured goods in a disrupted supply and logistics chain). Although not measured also reduction in quality such as hotel rooms without maid service. I would not assume that current situation is similar to 1970s. Instead of commodities you should have had your backyard filled with used cars to sell off.
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Re: Vanguard recommends commodities to combat sudden inflation
We've discussed Vanguard's research on this in various contexts before. Their point, which is really to be expected but it also is reflected in the data, is that while it is possible to buy products which reliably protect themselves from unexpected inflation, such as TIPS, there are not many products which will actually react strongly enough, and predictably enough, to unexpected inflation such as to help offset other parts of your portfolio if they are responding negatively.
But diversified collateralized commodity futures do have that type of relationship to unexpected inflation. The problem is there is an opportunity cost to using them--if inflation is as expected, they are likely just to have very low returns ala short-term TIPs. And if inflation is unexpectedly low, they will likely have even worse returns. Because there is no free lunch in marketed securities.
My two cents is if your portfolio is mostly made up of assets that are self-protecting, this is not such a problem. So, say, a portfolio made up of a mix of Social Security, TIPS, diversified real estate/REITs, ex-U.S. stocks (which provide something of a dollar devaluation hedge), and value-tilted U.S. stocks (value stocks historically have had a somewhat more reliably positive response to unexpected inflation, at least in relative terms) is not necessarily in need of much or any portfolio level unexpected inflation hedging.
The problem is a little more present if your portfolio is mostly nominal USD bonds and neutral-to-growth-tilted U.S. stocks. Nominal USD bonds predictably behave poorly in response to unexpected USD inflation. Non-value U.S. stocks are less predictable, but sometimes can behave quite poorly in response to unexpected USD inflation (as the article suggests, that is largely a function of whether unexpected inflation is predictive of unexpected future GDP growth, which is sometimes true and sometimes the opposite depending on current conditions). If your portfolio is mostly those two things, or other things without a predictably positive relationship to unexpected inflation, then you might think about whether you would benefit from having an effective and relatively reliable unexpected inflation hedge.
As a final thought, generally USD inflation has been in a downward trend recent years, and so things like CCFs or funds heavy on CCFs have done poorly--as expected. So at this point, they are extremely unpopular, and conversely "simple" mixes of mostly nominal USD bonds and neutral-to-growth U.S. stocks are relatively popular.
But I do think there is quite a bit of recency bias going on there. Since expected real returns are already so low based on current valuation measures, it wouldn't take 1970s-style stagflation conditions to create a pretty bad combined period for nominal USD bonds and non-value U.S. stocks.
Again, there are lots of ways to try to provide against such a scenario, and so diversified CCFs might not even be necessary to consider. But I do think at this point such defensive measures are often being simply ignored, because it has now been a fairly long time since they would have had more benefit than cost.
But diversified collateralized commodity futures do have that type of relationship to unexpected inflation. The problem is there is an opportunity cost to using them--if inflation is as expected, they are likely just to have very low returns ala short-term TIPs. And if inflation is unexpectedly low, they will likely have even worse returns. Because there is no free lunch in marketed securities.
My two cents is if your portfolio is mostly made up of assets that are self-protecting, this is not such a problem. So, say, a portfolio made up of a mix of Social Security, TIPS, diversified real estate/REITs, ex-U.S. stocks (which provide something of a dollar devaluation hedge), and value-tilted U.S. stocks (value stocks historically have had a somewhat more reliably positive response to unexpected inflation, at least in relative terms) is not necessarily in need of much or any portfolio level unexpected inflation hedging.
The problem is a little more present if your portfolio is mostly nominal USD bonds and neutral-to-growth-tilted U.S. stocks. Nominal USD bonds predictably behave poorly in response to unexpected USD inflation. Non-value U.S. stocks are less predictable, but sometimes can behave quite poorly in response to unexpected USD inflation (as the article suggests, that is largely a function of whether unexpected inflation is predictive of unexpected future GDP growth, which is sometimes true and sometimes the opposite depending on current conditions). If your portfolio is mostly those two things, or other things without a predictably positive relationship to unexpected inflation, then you might think about whether you would benefit from having an effective and relatively reliable unexpected inflation hedge.
As a final thought, generally USD inflation has been in a downward trend recent years, and so things like CCFs or funds heavy on CCFs have done poorly--as expected. So at this point, they are extremely unpopular, and conversely "simple" mixes of mostly nominal USD bonds and neutral-to-growth U.S. stocks are relatively popular.
But I do think there is quite a bit of recency bias going on there. Since expected real returns are already so low based on current valuation measures, it wouldn't take 1970s-style stagflation conditions to create a pretty bad combined period for nominal USD bonds and non-value U.S. stocks.
Again, there are lots of ways to try to provide against such a scenario, and so diversified CCFs might not even be necessary to consider. But I do think at this point such defensive measures are often being simply ignored, because it has now been a fairly long time since they would have had more benefit than cost.
Re: Vanguard recommends commodities to combat sudden inflation
"They" being Vanguard? What fund is that? I only see an index mentioned in the article, no fund listed that tracks that index. Last I heard results from funds that did tried to track broad commodity "indexes" were... problematic... not achieving the results of tracking the index.secondopinion wrote: ↑Tue Sep 14, 2021 4:24 pm They have a commodities fund. They want to "nudge" readers to consider it.
Not that I want to buy it.
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Re: Vanguard recommends commodities to combat sudden inflation
VCMDX, the Vanguard Commodity Strategies Fund. Not an index fund. Introduced in 2019. Someone from Vanguard in charge of the department that decides what to offer spoke at the 2019 Boglehead's meeting and walked us through a tortuous flow chart supposedly explaining how they had determined that they needed a commodities fund to fulfill the part of their mission statement, "to give them the best chance for investment success."JoMoney wrote: ↑Wed Sep 15, 2021 8:38 am"They" being Vanguard? What fund is that? I only see an index mentioned in the article, no fund listed that tracks that index. Last I heard results from funds that did tried to track broad commodity "indexes" were... problematic... not achieving the results of tracking the index.secondopinion wrote: ↑Tue Sep 14, 2021 4:24 pm They have a commodities fund. They want to "nudge" readers to consider it.
Not that I want to buy it.
For better or worse, Vanguard is clearly reverting to the mean and becoming more and more like other providers, offering the same things competitors offer and the same things customers--or perhaps advisors--want.
Vanguard notably stayed aloof from the collateralized-commodity-futures fad of about 2003 to 2009, when "everyone" echoed a paper saying commodities should be part of standard retirement-savings portfolios... and Fidelity damaged their target-date funds by including them: Fidelity retirement funds take multiyear hit from commodities bet. Vanguard did include them in its buzzword-compliant Managed Payout Fund.
But I don't think Vanguard has the strength of character to stay off bandwagons any more.
Last edited by nisiprius on Wed Sep 15, 2021 11:09 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Vanguard recommends commodities to combat sudden inflation
Vanguard is a business not a religious institution that would be characterized by strength of character.
Is Fidelity, Schwab, Apple, Microsoft, Tesla or any other business expected to show strength of character?
This forum has some unreasonable expectations for Vanguard because Jack Bogle's personal traits and beliefs have been unfairly assigned to a business that needs to be competitive 20 years after his departure. Longing for Jack Bogle's Vanguard is like longing for the United Airlines of the 1960s flying my parents to Hawaii for their honeymoon. It doesn't exist any more, and maybe it's more romanticized that it actually was at the time.
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Re: Vanguard recommends commodities to combat sudden inflation
So in recent years, inflation has been more unexpectedly low than high, CCF funds have predictably done relatively poorly as a result, and there is extremely little interest in even discussing them in most personal investor forums. Basically, if you are paying for car accident insurance and you are never in an accident over some period of time, your "investment" in the form of premiums is going to look very bad in terms of returns. The same basic concept applies to funds which hedged against unexpectedly high inflation with CCFs and instead inflation was unexpectedly low.
That said, for the record--two of the identified problems with the initial wave of CCF index funds were front-running and contango. So, there are now CCF funds designed to deal with both of those problems, basically by not mechanically buying the futures on their commodities list on a set schedule, but allowing some flexibility on both timing and on whether or not that specific commodity is in contango over the relevant contract period. Some of these funds are quasi-index funds in the sense they follow specific rules for how they do all that, but (hopefully) the specific application of those rules are sufficiently hard to predict in advance of actual purchases that front-running isn't profitable. Others are just actively managed with those as stated investment goals.
Again, since this entire class of funds has predictably underperformed in recent years, very few personal investors are even remotely interested in these newer generations of CCF funds. But if and when we go through a period where inflation is more unexpectedly high than low, then I suspect there will be a renewed interest in the topic.
Re: Vanguard recommends commodities to combat sudden inflation
Also
Tax inefficient
It is meaningless to talk broadly of commodities. The returns to a fund will depend on the mix of commodities on which it is based and the practices with respect to rolling contracts as they expire. There is no standard index for this. Many different implementations. Impossible to know what to expect from any particular fund.
As for the insurance analogy, when shopping for insurance, one looks for a reliable payoff and low costs. No one would buy auto insurance if the payment after an accident were determined randomly. Commodity funds have transaction and management costs and generate ordinary income. They would make a terrible insurance.
They do permit one to have money in something other than stocks and bonds. Still unclear to me whether that low correlation would be worth the volatility and cost.
Tax inefficient
It is meaningless to talk broadly of commodities. The returns to a fund will depend on the mix of commodities on which it is based and the practices with respect to rolling contracts as they expire. There is no standard index for this. Many different implementations. Impossible to know what to expect from any particular fund.
As for the insurance analogy, when shopping for insurance, one looks for a reliable payoff and low costs. No one would buy auto insurance if the payment after an accident were determined randomly. Commodity funds have transaction and management costs and generate ordinary income. They would make a terrible insurance.
They do permit one to have money in something other than stocks and bonds. Still unclear to me whether that low correlation would be worth the volatility and cost.
We don't know how to beat the market on a risk-adjusted basis, and we don't know anyone that does know either |
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Re: Vanguard recommends commodities to combat sudden inflation
Not something I would do but I assume one could carefully construct a set of futures positions on T bonds that would be near perfect hedges against inflation. You would have to maintain the positions, take gains and losses as the prices jumped around and sort out your taxes. Unlike investing in CCFs of a basket of commodities, one would have a reliable performance when inflation returns.
This might be difficult to put into a fund format, which may be why you do not see it advertised by those offering the service.
This might be difficult to put into a fund format, which may be why you do not see it advertised by those offering the service.
We don't know how to beat the market on a risk-adjusted basis, and we don't know anyone that does know either |
--Swedroe |
We assume that markets are efficient, that prices are right |
--Fama
Re: Vanguard recommends commodities to combat sudden inflation
I wish fully understood the trajectory of federal debt, it’s affect on my money, my investments and the economy/inflation. As it is I just don’t have very much faith in the future or my investments.
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Re: Vanguard recommends commodities to combat sudden inflation
So Vanguard is recommending market timing now?
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Re: Vanguard recommends commodities to combat sudden inflation
Well, that is why it is an analogy. It is true diversified CCFs are not in fact literally insurance, and the point of the analogy did not depend on them literally being insurance.afan wrote: ↑Wed Sep 15, 2021 10:34 am As for the insurance analogy, when shopping for insurance, one looks for a reliable payoff and low costs. No one would buy auto insurance if the payment after an accident were determined randomly. Commodity funds have transaction and management costs and generate ordinary income. They would make a terrible insurance.
The more literal term for using CCFs as a way of trying to create an offset to the way your other securities might likely react to unexpected inflation would be a "hedge". And the literal way of expressing the same thought is that if you investment some capital in a hedging security in order to protect against possible events of type X, typically it will have an opportunity cost in terms of expected return. And then if X never happens over a particular period, you will have incurred this opportunity cost and gotten no hedging benefit.
I will note, though, it is quite common for people to analogize hedges to insurance, with the understanding that it is indeed an imperfect analogy. In fact, interestingly that exact same dynamic is played out at this Investopedia article on hedges:
https://www.investopedia.com/terms/h/hedge.asp
However, I would not agree the typical range of responses of diversified CCFs to unexpected USD inflation is "random". It certainly isn't perfectly predictable--as the quote notes, we are indeed talking about an "imperfect science" with this sort of hedging strategy, But the reason they typically respond with something within a range of positive betas to unexpected inflation, as Vanguard's data shows, is based in fairly straightforward economics.Hedging is somewhat analogous to taking out an insurance policy. If you own a home in a flood-prone area, you will want to protect that asset from the risk of flooding—to hedge it, in other words—by taking out flood insurance. In this example, you cannot prevent a flood, but you can plan ahead of time to mitigate the dangers in the event that a flood did occur.
There is a risk-reward tradeoff inherent in hedging; while it reduces potential risk, it also chips away at potential gains. Put simply, hedging isn't free. In the case of the flood insurance policy example, the monthly payments add up, and if the flood never comes, the policyholder receives no payout. Still, most people would choose to take that predictable, circumscribed loss rather than suddenly lose the roof over their head.
In the investment world, hedging works in the same way. Investors and money managers use hedging practices to reduce and control their exposure to risks. In order to appropriately hedge in the investment world, one must use various instruments in a strategic fashion to offset the risk of adverse price movements in the market. The best way to do this is to make another investment in a targeted and controlled way. Of course, the parallels with the insurance example above are limited: in the case of flood insurance, the policy holder would be completely compensated for her loss, perhaps less a deductible. In the investment space, hedging is both more complex and an imperfect science.
Now, if you could find an unexpected inflation hedge which had an equal or better post-cost (including tax) expected return AND an equal or better expected beta to unexpected inflation AND that beta to unexpected inflation was even more reliable, that would indeed be a better hedge against unexpected inflation.
But again Vanguard's research is helpful in pointing out that at least most common securities do not have all of those properties. TIPS, for example, have a very reliable response to inflation as measured by CPI (since it is contractual and formulaic in nature), and around the same expected return as diversified CCFs. But they do not have nearly as high an expected beta to unexpected inflation. And in fact, since their beta is so reliable, it is reliably LOW in the sense of always being right around 1. And that means they are not actually usable as hedges at the portfolio level.
No, that would be a bad reason to hold CCFs. There is no good reason to believe they would likely improve the efficiency of a portfolio for those particular reasons.They do permit one to have money in something other than stocks and bonds. Still unclear to me whether that low correlation would be worth the volatility and cost.
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Re: Vanguard recommends commodities to combat sudden inflation
You could also take a leveraged position in TIPs, which is actually what some people de facto do to the extent they, say, hold a fixed-rate mortgage, student loan, or so on, and then invest in TIPs at the same time.afan wrote: ↑Wed Sep 15, 2021 1:40 pm Not something I would do but I assume one could carefully construct a set of futures positions on T bonds that would be near perfect hedges against inflation. You would have to maintain the positions, take gains and losses as the prices jumped around and sort out your taxes. Unlike investing in CCFs of a basket of commodities, one would have a reliable performance when inflation returns.
This might be difficult to put into a fund format, which may be why you do not see it advertised by those offering the service.
Again, though, the degree to which you can achieve a certain beta to unexpected inflation these ways would depend on how far you were willing to go with such strategies. And I do think you would have to look carefully at costs, taxes, other risks you might be increasing, and so on.
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Re: Vanguard recommends commodities to combat sudden inflation
Vanguard's forward-looking asset models have never assumed the future will be exactly like the past, and they do try to forecast the most likely range of outcomes based on current conditions. And to the extent using those forecasts in investment planning counts as "market timing", that isn't a new thing for them.
That said, only part of their argument in the linked article is based on their forecast that "U.S. equities' hedging power is likely to decrease in the future, as commodity-related sectors including energy and materials constitute far less of the equity market, and sectors such as technology and consumer discretionary—not effective inflation hedges—constitute more relative to three decades ago." Although that is in fact an interesting point and sounds pretty plausible to me.
But in any event, their other observation is that three decades of data supports the hypothesis that diversified CCFs typically have a large, positive beta to unexpected inflation.
And I am not sure that particular combination of arguments really counts as market timing per se. If the basic hypothesis is positive beta to unexpected increases in commodity prices is a useful unexpected inflation hedge, and at least part of the issue with broad market equities is that their response to unexpected inflation has decreased with commodity producers losing share in those markets, then is it really market timing to suggest the need to offset that declining share in some other way to achieve the same expected hedging effect?
I mean, suppose you wanted X% in TIPS, and had 2X% in some bond fund which was 50% TIPS. So far so good.
But then the bond fund becomes only 25% TIPS. Would it be market timing to say you then needed to figure out a way to make up for that reduction in TIPS?
Re: Vanguard recommends commodities to combat sudden inflation
Jack Bogle launched Vanguard's precious metals fund in 1984. I think it was actively managed, too.Kevin K wrote: ↑Tue Sep 14, 2021 4:05 pm Never thought I'd see the day. Gold bullion next month?
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Re: Vanguard recommends commodities to combat sudden inflation
I may be wrong--I don't know where to find old annual reports--but I don't believe it ever held meaningful quantities of actual precious metal, although it was allowed to by the fund rules. By the time I was paying attention, it was something like 99% stocks (precious metal equity), with some microscopic holding of platinum.AlohaJoe wrote: ↑Thu Sep 16, 2021 5:44 amJack Bogle launched Vanguard's precious metals fund in 1984. I think it was actively managed, too.Kevin K wrote: ↑Tue Sep 14, 2021 4:05 pm Never thought I'd see the day. Gold bullion next month?
https://advisors.vanguard.com/insights/ ... 6632010697
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Re: Vanguard recommends commodities to combat sudden inflation
You would have to look at actual implementation. However, you would have a high R2 in your inflation hedge. Much higher than with commodities. Due to leverage the futures or leveraged position would be volatile. One would have to see whether it was more volatile than a CCF fund. If at the same beta it had higher volatility, it may still be a better solution due to the R2.NiceUnparticularMan wrote: ↑Thu Sep 16, 2021 4:53 amYou could also take a leveraged position in TIPs, which is actually what some people de facto do to the extent they, say, hold a fixed-rate mortgage, student loan, or so on, and then invest in TIPs at the same time.afan wrote: ↑Wed Sep 15, 2021 1:40 pm Not something I would do but I assume one could carefully construct a set of futures positions on T bonds that would be near perfect hedges against inflation. You would have to maintain the positions, take gains and losses as the prices jumped around and sort out your taxes. Unlike investing in CCFs of a basket of commodities, one would have a reliable performance when inflation returns.
This might be difficult to put into a fund format, which may be why you do not see it advertised by those offering the service.
Again, though, the degree to which you can achieve a certain beta to unexpected inflation these ways would depend on how far you were willing to go with such strategies. And I do think you would have to look carefully at costs, taxes, other risks you might be increasing, and so on.
CCFs are highly volatile, making them less appealing.
Under normal circumstances, the expected return to TIPS is positive. One would expect a leveraged basket of TIPS to have a volatile but positive return. The downside is that you run the risk of losing so much when the bet goes against you that you are wiped out.
We don't know how to beat the market on a risk-adjusted basis, and we don't know anyone that does know either |
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We assume that markets are efficient, that prices are right |
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Re: Vanguard recommends commodities to combat sudden inflation
nisiprius wrote: ↑Wed Sep 15, 2021 8:57 amVCMDX, the Vanguard Commodity Strategies Fund. Not an index fund. Introduced in 2019. Someone from Vanguard in charge of the department that decides what to offer spoke at the 2019 Boglehead's meeting and walked us through a tortuous flow chart supposedly explaining how they had determined that they needed a commodities fund to fulfill the part of their mission statement, "to give them the best chance for investment success."JoMoney wrote: ↑Wed Sep 15, 2021 8:38 am"They" being Vanguard? What fund is that? I only see an index mentioned in the article, no fund listed that tracks that index. Last I heard results from funds that did tried to track broad commodity "indexes" were... problematic... not achieving the results of tracking the index.secondopinion wrote: ↑Tue Sep 14, 2021 4:24 pm They have a commodities fund. They want to "nudge" readers to consider it.
Not that I want to buy it.
For better or worse, Vanguard is clearly reverting to the mean and becoming more and more like other providers, offering the same things competitors offer and the same things customers--or perhaps advisors--want.
Vanguard notably stayed aloof from the collateralized-commodity-futures fad of about 2003 to 2009, when "everyone" echoed a paper saying commodities should be part of standard retirement-savings portfolios... and Fidelity damaged their target-date funds by including them: Fidelity retirement funds take multiyear hit from commodities bet. Vanguard did include them in its buzzword-compliant Managed Payout Fund.
But I don't think Vanguard has the strength of character to stay off bandwagons any more.
Fidelity dumped the small allocation to commodities (1.5% or so) in the TDF's about 2 years ago. They have made 2 changes since 2019. 1.) Added long term treasury's of 3% at every target date as a partial replacement for the total investment grade bond fund and upped the international component to approximately market weight. TIPS and treasury bill money market funds still get rolled in about 5 years before retirement and gradually increased.
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Re: Vanguard recommends commodities to combat sudden inflation
You say "oil did well," but funds like these do not hold oil. They hold commodity futures: VCMDX:Svensk Anga wrote: ↑Tue Sep 14, 2021 4:31 pm Commodities (chiefly oil) did well the last time there was sustained high inflation, in the 1970's. I would have to be convinced that they will perform as well if we get another round of serious inflation. Seems like the drivers are different now.
That's not a technicality. Circa 2009, retail investors piled into "oil ETFs," OIL and USO, certain the price of oil would go up. The price of oil did go up--and they had trouble understanding why their ETFs went down.The fund will rely on commodity derivative securities.
To be sure, Vanguard's discussion is based on commodity futures.
I have another problem with Vanguard's paper which is that it seems irrelevant to study commodities as an inflation hedge starting in 1989. Nobody has needed an inflation hedge since 1989! Their data period begins almost exactly with the end of the most recent period of high inflation. I've seen things like this before, where people are studying short-term correlations of noisy small fluctuations in the CPI with other things. It seems pointless. If suitable data for periods of high inflation doesn't exist, then don't look at some other period just because that's where the data is.
Last edited by nisiprius on Thu Sep 16, 2021 6:58 am, edited 4 times in total.
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Re: Vanguard recommends commodities to combat sudden inflation
At one point the allocation to commodities was about 10% in some of their funds. It was serious, not just decoration.Ferdinand2014 wrote: ↑Thu Sep 16, 2021 6:39 am...Fidelity dumped the small allocation to commodities (1.5% or so) in the TDF's about 2 years ago...
In fact we got a poster in the forum asking about possible cash drag in the fund because Morningstar was showing a 10% "cash" allocation in the fund--it was the commodity exposure, which shows up in Morningstar's allocation charts as "cash" rather than as "other" for the same (slightly mysterious) reason that it does in the Fidelity Series Commodity Strategy Fund, FCSSX.
Last edited by nisiprius on Thu Sep 16, 2021 7:51 am, edited 3 times in total.
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Re: Vanguard recommends commodities to combat sudden inflation
So just penciling this out--Vanguard has diversified CCFs at a beta of 7-9 to unexpected inflation over the last decade, TIPS at 1. I'm not sure that is a reliable range for CCFs going forward, but if you were in fact hoping to leverage TIPS to a beta of 7+ . . . that's a lot of leverage.afan wrote: ↑Thu Sep 16, 2021 6:37 amYou would have to look at actual implementation. However, you would have a high R2 in your inflation hedge. Much higher than with commodities. Due to leverage the futures or leveraged position would be volatile. One would have to see whether it was more volatile than a CCF fund. If at the same beta it had higher volatility, it may still be a better solution due to the R2.NiceUnparticularMan wrote: ↑Thu Sep 16, 2021 4:53 amYou could also take a leveraged position in TIPs, which is actually what some people de facto do to the extent they, say, hold a fixed-rate mortgage, student loan, or so on, and then invest in TIPs at the same time.afan wrote: ↑Wed Sep 15, 2021 1:40 pm Not something I would do but I assume one could carefully construct a set of futures positions on T bonds that would be near perfect hedges against inflation. You would have to maintain the positions, take gains and losses as the prices jumped around and sort out your taxes. Unlike investing in CCFs of a basket of commodities, one would have a reliable performance when inflation returns.
This might be difficult to put into a fund format, which may be why you do not see it advertised by those offering the service.
Again, though, the degree to which you can achieve a certain beta to unexpected inflation these ways would depend on how far you were willing to go with such strategies. And I do think you would have to look carefully at costs, taxes, other risks you might be increasing, and so on.
CCFs are highly volatile, making them less appealing.
Under normal circumstances, the expected return to TIPS is positive. One would expect a leveraged basket of TIPS to have a volatile but positive return. The downside is that you run the risk of losing so much when the bet goes against you that you are wiped out.
So it would be interesting to see someone actually synthesize the results (I'm too lazy) and make a comparison in terms of volatility, taxable income, and so on with TIPS leveraged to that degree.
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Re: Vanguard recommends commodities to combat sudden inflation
So what they are interested in studying is hedges for unexpected high inflation in relative terms, not high inflation in absolute terms. This is a critical distinction because securities like nominal bonds will do fine in periods of high inflation when that high inflation is actually expected.nisiprius wrote: ↑Thu Sep 16, 2021 6:41 am I have another problem with Vanguard's paper which is that it seems irrelevant to study commodities as an inflation hedge starting in 1989. Nobody has needed an inflation hedge since 1989! Their data period begins almost exactly with the end of the most recent period of high inflation. I've seen things like this before, where people are studying short-term correlations of noisy small fluctuations in the CPI with other things. It seems pointless. If suitable data for periods of high inflation doesn't exist, then don't look at some other period just because that's where the data is.
Given that, during long periods of generally low inflation in absolute terms, you can still have periods of inflation which are unexpectedly high in relative terms. I suppose ideally you would have the net over the period be more unexpectedly high than unexpectedly low inflation, but I am not sure that really matters all that much in terms of trying to study the relationship between a security and a particular factor.
Re: Vanguard recommends commodities to combat sudden inflation
Sure, but my point is that some people think In The Good Old Days, Vanguard was some perfect paragon of the 5 or 6 Boglehead-approved broad-based index funds and nothing else. And Now It Is Going To The Dogs after Bogle left. Except Vanguard has had stupid sector funds forever. It has had active funds for forever. It has had active bonds funds in the 1980s, when Bogle was the CEO. They started their junk bond fund in 1978! Active funds like PRIMECAP and STAR and Explorer were launched under Bogle. He may have repeatedly written about only investing in the US but he had no problem launching active international funds like VWIGX.nisiprius wrote: ↑Thu Sep 16, 2021 6:30 amI may be wrong--I don't know where to find old annual reports--but I don't believe it ever held meaningful quantities of actual precious metal, although it was allowed to by the fund rules. By the time I was paying attention, it was something like 99% stocks (precious metal equity), with some microscopic holding of platinum.AlohaJoe wrote: ↑Thu Sep 16, 2021 5:44 amJack Bogle launched Vanguard's precious metals fund in 1984. I think it was actively managed, too.Kevin K wrote: ↑Tue Sep 14, 2021 4:05 pm Never thought I'd see the day. Gold bullion next month?
https://advisors.vanguard.com/insights/ ... 6632010697
All of which is fine by me. But people act shocked -- SHOCKED! -- when they see Vanguard launch some new weird fund and pretend it has never happened before.
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Re: Vanguard recommends commodities to combat sudden inflation
Well said!stan1 wrote: ↑Wed Sep 15, 2021 9:02 amVanguard is a business not a religious institution that would be characterized by strength of character.
Is Fidelity, Schwab, Apple, Microsoft, Tesla or any other business expected to show strength of character?
This forum has some unreasonable expectations for Vanguard because Jack Bogle's personal traits and beliefs have been unfairly assigned to a business that needs to be competitive 20 years after his departure. Longing for Jack Bogle's Vanguard is like longing for the United Airlines of the 1960s flying my parents to Hawaii for their honeymoon. It doesn't exist any more, and maybe it's more romanticized that it actually was at the time.
Me, I cannot believe Mr Bogle would have been willing to see his baby become an also-ran company by choosing to not adapt to the times. Founders have large egos when it comes to their companies, as well they should.
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Re: Vanguard recommends commodities to combat sudden inflation
Making changes to one's AA on the basis of expected market movements is bona fide market timing. Being a resident trend follower, I'm not diametrically opposed to that, but let's call it for what it is. If Vanguard is recommending that investors permanently change their AA to include commodities, that's not market timing. But it sounds like the recommendation is coming specifically to address higher inflation and is temporary.NiceUnparticularMan wrote: ↑Thu Sep 16, 2021 5:08 amVanguard's forward-looking asset models have never assumed the future will be exactly like the past, and they do try to forecast the most likely range of outcomes based on current conditions. And to the extent using those forecasts in investment planning counts as "market timing", that isn't a new thing for them.
That said, only part of their argument in the linked article is based on their forecast that "U.S. equities' hedging power is likely to decrease in the future, as commodity-related sectors including energy and materials constitute far less of the equity market, and sectors such as technology and consumer discretionary—not effective inflation hedges—constitute more relative to three decades ago." Although that is in fact an interesting point and sounds pretty plausible to me.
But in any event, their other observation is that three decades of data supports the hypothesis that diversified CCFs typically have a large, positive beta to unexpected inflation.
And I am not sure that particular combination of arguments really counts as market timing per se. If the basic hypothesis is positive beta to unexpected increases in commodity prices is a useful unexpected inflation hedge, and at least part of the issue with broad market equities is that their response to unexpected inflation has decreased with commodity producers losing share in those markets, then is it really market timing to suggest the need to offset that declining share in some other way to achieve the same expected hedging effect?
I mean, suppose you wanted X% in TIPS, and had 2X% in some bond fund which was 50% TIPS. So far so good.
But then the bond fund becomes only 25% TIPS. Would it be market timing to say you then needed to figure out a way to make up for that reduction in TIPS?
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Re: Vanguard recommends commodities to combat sudden inflation
I guess my question is what counts as "making changes to one's AA"?willthrill81 wrote: ↑Thu Sep 16, 2021 9:11 amMaking changes to one's AA on the basis of expected market movements is bona fide market timing. Being a resident trend follower, I'm not diametrically opposed to that, but let's call it for what it is. If Vanguard is recommending that investors permanently change their AA to include commodities, that's not market timing.NiceUnparticularMan wrote: ↑Thu Sep 16, 2021 5:08 amVanguard's forward-looking asset models have never assumed the future will be exactly like the past, and they do try to forecast the most likely range of outcomes based on current conditions. And to the extent using those forecasts in investment planning counts as "market timing", that isn't a new thing for them.
That said, only part of their argument in the linked article is based on their forecast that "U.S. equities' hedging power is likely to decrease in the future, as commodity-related sectors including energy and materials constitute far less of the equity market, and sectors such as technology and consumer discretionary—not effective inflation hedges—constitute more relative to three decades ago." Although that is in fact an interesting point and sounds pretty plausible to me.
But in any event, their other observation is that three decades of data supports the hypothesis that diversified CCFs typically have a large, positive beta to unexpected inflation.
And I am not sure that particular combination of arguments really counts as market timing per se. If the basic hypothesis is positive beta to unexpected increases in commodity prices is a useful unexpected inflation hedge, and at least part of the issue with broad market equities is that their response to unexpected inflation has decreased with commodity producers losing share in those markets, then is it really market timing to suggest the need to offset that declining share in some other way to achieve the same expected hedging effect?
I mean, suppose you wanted X% in TIPS, and had 2X% in some bond fund which was 50% TIPS. So far so good.
But then the bond fund becomes only 25% TIPS. Would it be market timing to say you then needed to figure out a way to make up for that reduction in TIPS?
If you define your asset allocation in terms like 60% stocks, 40% bonds, and then you do 55% stocks, 40% bonds, 5% CCFs, OK, you changed, right?
But what if your stock index was originally 10% commodity-linked stocks, but now it is 5%?
So, you could define your original asset allocation as 50% non-commodity-linked stocks, 10% commodity-linked stocks, 40% bonds. But now without you doing anything, your asset allocation has already changed to 55% non-commodity-linked stocks, 5% commodity-linked stocks, 40% bonds.
And if that is how you see it, would doing something to correct for that effect actually be changing your AA? Or is it more trying to keep it the same?
I don't think that is an easy question to answer. I think it depends on whether you care about having a certain commodity-linked hedge or not. If you don't care, then you can ignore these index changes. But if you do care, you may need to offset index changes in some way to protect your investment strategy from unintended changes.
That's not how I read the article per se. As I read it, they set out a general problem:But it sounds like the recommendation is coming specifically to address higher inflation and is temporary.
That's not a problem dependent on current market conditions. It is a problem which is always present.Financial markets expect a certain level of inflation and factor it into the asset prices they set, a condition theoretically neutral for investment portfolios. Unexpected inflation, on the other hand, can erode portfolios' purchasing power, a challenge especially for investors with a shorter investment horizon, such as retirees.
That said, I am not suggesting this article is coming out of the blue. They do in fact reference "unexpected inflation, like we've seen recently." And we know from discussions around here there is an uptick in people worrying about inflation. So I do not doubt the audience for this article is such people.
Nonetheless, the substance of their argument doesn't depend on any sort of claim that the risk of unexpected inflation is unusually high right now.
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Re: Vanguard recommends commodities to combat sudden inflation
I've never once heard of an investor specifically seeking out 'commodity-linked stocks'. Though I have no doubt that there are investors who desire allocations to such stocks, I doubt they are so numerous as to warrant discussion in this context.NiceUnparticularMan wrote: ↑Thu Sep 16, 2021 9:38 amI guess my question is what counts as "making changes to one's AA"?willthrill81 wrote: ↑Thu Sep 16, 2021 9:11 amMaking changes to one's AA on the basis of expected market movements is bona fide market timing. Being a resident trend follower, I'm not diametrically opposed to that, but let's call it for what it is. If Vanguard is recommending that investors permanently change their AA to include commodities, that's not market timing.NiceUnparticularMan wrote: ↑Thu Sep 16, 2021 5:08 amVanguard's forward-looking asset models have never assumed the future will be exactly like the past, and they do try to forecast the most likely range of outcomes based on current conditions. And to the extent using those forecasts in investment planning counts as "market timing", that isn't a new thing for them.
That said, only part of their argument in the linked article is based on their forecast that "U.S. equities' hedging power is likely to decrease in the future, as commodity-related sectors including energy and materials constitute far less of the equity market, and sectors such as technology and consumer discretionary—not effective inflation hedges—constitute more relative to three decades ago." Although that is in fact an interesting point and sounds pretty plausible to me.
But in any event, their other observation is that three decades of data supports the hypothesis that diversified CCFs typically have a large, positive beta to unexpected inflation.
And I am not sure that particular combination of arguments really counts as market timing per se. If the basic hypothesis is positive beta to unexpected increases in commodity prices is a useful unexpected inflation hedge, and at least part of the issue with broad market equities is that their response to unexpected inflation has decreased with commodity producers losing share in those markets, then is it really market timing to suggest the need to offset that declining share in some other way to achieve the same expected hedging effect?
I mean, suppose you wanted X% in TIPS, and had 2X% in some bond fund which was 50% TIPS. So far so good.
But then the bond fund becomes only 25% TIPS. Would it be market timing to say you then needed to figure out a way to make up for that reduction in TIPS?
If you define your asset allocation in terms like 60% stocks, 40% bonds, and then you do 55% stocks, 40% bonds, 5% CCFs, OK, you changed, right?
But what if your stock index was originally 10% commodity-linked stocks, but now it is 5%?
So, you could define your original asset allocation as 50% non-commodity-linked stocks, 10% commodity-linked stocks, 40% bonds. But now without you doing anything, your asset allocation has already changed to 55% non-commodity-linked stocks, 5% commodity-linked stocks, 40% bonds.
And if that is how you see it, would doing something to correct for that effect actually be changing your AA? Or is it more trying to keep it the same?
I don't think that is an easy question to answer. I think it depends on whether you care about having a certain commodity-linked hedge or not. If you don't care, then you can ignore these index changes. But if you do care, you may need to offset index changes in some way to protect your investment strategy from unintended changes.
Your broader point that the composition of the indices one has purchased (I know that you can't literally buy an index, but we all know what I mean) may have changed meaningfully since one bought it is interesting. Some investors might have liked the S&P 500 more when it was more tilted toward manufacturing and less now that it is more tech-heavy. But I'm not sure that it's in most investors' best interests to tilt to certain sectors.
Perhaps you're correct. But I strongly suspect that if recent inflation was 2% or less that this recommendation to own commodities wouldn't have seen the light of day.NiceUnparticularMan wrote: ↑Thu Sep 16, 2021 9:38 am That said, I am not suggesting this article is coming out of the blue. They do in fact reference "unexpected inflation, like we've seen recently." And we know from discussions around here there is an uptick in people worrying about inflation. So I do not doubt the audience for this article is such people.
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Re: Vanguard recommends commodities to combat sudden inflation
re; inflation, all one can do is maybe tilt toward Value, own some inflation-indexed bonds, and tough it out. I note the unremarkable return advantage of the popular $DBC commodity ETF since early 2020, versus global stocks. Commodity future markets were never intended to be public investment vehicles.
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Re: Vanguard recommends commodities to combat sudden inflation
Vanguard materials fund VAW. $3.8 billion. Somebody wants it.willthrill81 wrote: ↑Thu Sep 16, 2021 9:47 am
I've never once heard of an investor specifically seeking out 'commodity-linked stocks'. Though I have no doubt that there are investors who desire allocations to such stocks, I doubt they are so numerous as to warrant discussion in this context.
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Re: Vanguard recommends commodities to combat sudden inflation
Of course, but I've not heard anyone here asking about it, nor have I heard a cogent recommendation in favor of doing so.afan wrote: ↑Thu Sep 16, 2021 2:23 pmVanguard materials fund VAW. $3.8 billion. Somebody wants it.willthrill81 wrote: ↑Thu Sep 16, 2021 9:47 am
I've never once heard of an investor specifically seeking out 'commodity-linked stocks'. Though I have no doubt that there are investors who desire allocations to such stocks, I doubt they are so numerous as to warrant discussion in this context.
The Sensible Steward
Re: Vanguard recommends commodities to combat sudden inflation
Maybe I misread, but I thought the point was that due to these compositional changes in the S&P 500 index (which is now dominated by tech/growth, and far less energy/manufacturing/materials) that investments in the stock index would be less likely to respond to unexpected inflation, as may have been the case in yesteryear. So it’s not so much about “tilting” toward certain sectors (i.e. they didn’t “choose” such a tilt originally), but rather it’s about trying to restore whatever unexpected inflation protection that used to be present to some degree in the stock index of yesteryear.willthrill81 wrote: ↑Thu Sep 16, 2021 9:47 am Your broader point that the composition of the indices one has purchased (I know that you can't literally buy an index, but we all know what I mean) may have changed meaningfully since one bought it is interesting. Some investors might have liked the S&P 500 more when it was more tilted toward manufacturing and less now that it is more tech-heavy. But I'm not sure that it's in most investors' best interests to tilt to certain sectors.
I’m not saying I necessarily buy into that line of thinking, nor do I think commodity investments are even a good idea for most investors, but it is an interesting consideration nonetheless.
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Re: Vanguard recommends commodities to combat sudden inflation
It's interesting an idea to be sure. I'm just not sure that there is a strong enough link between commodity prices and 'commodity-linked' stocks to result in meaningful changes to portfolio performance without drastic divergence from a simple cap-weighted index, which has its own pros and cons. There seem to be multiple parts to this theory (unexpected inflation -> commodity price outperformance -> commodity-linked stock outperformance -> tilted portfolio outperformance), forming a sort of 'logic chain', and a weak link anywhere along the way may result in a breakdown of the strategy.hornet96 wrote: ↑Thu Sep 16, 2021 9:08 pmMaybe I misread, but I thought the point was that due to these compositional changes in the S&P 500 index (which is now dominated by tech/growth, and far less energy/manufacturing/materials) that investments in the stock index would be less likely to respond to unexpected inflation, as may have been the case in yesteryear. So it’s not so much about “tilting” toward certain sectors (i.e. they didn’t “choose” such a tilt originally), but rather it’s about trying to restore whatever unexpected inflation protection that used to be present to some degree in the stock index of yesteryear.willthrill81 wrote: ↑Thu Sep 16, 2021 9:47 am Your broader point that the composition of the indices one has purchased (I know that you can't literally buy an index, but we all know what I mean) may have changed meaningfully since one bought it is interesting. Some investors might have liked the S&P 500 more when it was more tilted toward manufacturing and less now that it is more tech-heavy. But I'm not sure that it's in most investors' best interests to tilt to certain sectors.
I’m not saying I necessarily buy into that line of thinking, nor do I think commodity investments are even a good idea for most investors, but it is an interesting consideration nonetheless.
The Sensible Steward
Re: Vanguard recommends commodities to combat sudden inflation
Just out of curiosity, how are commodities doing right now? One would think that with whiffs of inflation that commodities ought to be perking up.
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Re: Vanguard recommends commodities to combat sudden inflation
Vanguard's VCMDX fund is up 31% YTD vs. the S&P 500's 20%.
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Re: Vanguard recommends commodities to combat sudden inflation
I have 15% AA in real asset fund which suppose to fight inflation. I am prepared.
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Re: Vanguard recommends commodities to combat sudden inflation
From that article:nisiprius wrote: ↑Wed Sep 15, 2021 8:57 am ...
Vanguard notably stayed aloof from the collateralized-commodity-futures fad of about 2003 to 2009, when "everyone" echoed a paper saying commodities should be part of standard retirement-savings portfolios... and Fidelity damaged their target-date funds by including them: Fidelity retirement funds take multiyear hit from commodities bet.
Vanguard Group, the largest target-date fund provider, does not invest in commodities for those retirement portfolios. The increased costs and complexity associated with commodities outweigh their benefits, said Senior Investment Analyst Scott Donaldson.
“People may think because they own commodities, they own barrels of oil and bushels of wheat,” Donaldson said. “But what they really own are financial derivatives. These can be complex, confusing and expensive.”
Re: Vanguard recommends commodities to combat sudden inflation
Hard to see commodity futures being a good buy-and-hold investment.
Maybe the inflation narrative is now overbought?
Maybe the inflation narrative is now overbought?
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Re: Vanguard recommends commodities to combat sudden inflation
Oddly, Fidelity or Blackrock would say yes. That their principles of business, and operation, are more important than anything - because they guard their reputation. Without its reputation, a financial services company will implode very quickly.
Money is not like any other business. Looking after peoples' money implies fiduciary duty. (one might make analogies to the pharmaceutical business, and the costs for society that lapses of "character" create - Purdue comes to mind, but also Merck etc). Failures in that led to the 2008 Crash. Or 2000 when analysts were recommending stocks to win lucrative corporate deal fees, when they actually believed the stocks were PO- (look up Henry Blodgett & Infospace). It was a game that "everyone" knew was going on - except it turned out the general investing public did not. CDOs were similar.
"Strength of character" is actually a good description of organisational culture. Organisations tend to go horribly wrong when they pursue profit as their only goal (Enron, Worldcom, Nortel etc).
Yes Vanguard needs to evolve with the times.This forum has some unreasonable expectations for Vanguard because Jack Bogle's personal traits and beliefs have been unfairly assigned to a business that needs to be competitive 20 years after his departure. Longing for Jack Bogle's Vanguard is like longing for the United Airlines of the 1960s flying my parents to Hawaii for their honeymoon. It doesn't exist any more, and maybe it's more romanticized that it actually was at the time.
Yes Jack Bogle's fundamental concepts re investing have yet to be disproved.
The rush to "real assets" is also a rush to higher fees and a bandwagon effect of higher valuations. See piece in the Economist about this (last couple of weeks).
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Re: Vanguard recommends commodities to combat sudden inflation
I disagree that the sector funds are stupid, especially to the not so typical investor; but yes, I am not shocked in the slightest in some of the choices by Vanguard.AlohaJoe wrote: ↑Thu Sep 16, 2021 7:23 amSure, but my point is that some people think In The Good Old Days, Vanguard was some perfect paragon of the 5 or 6 Boglehead-approved broad-based index funds and nothing else. And Now It Is Going To The Dogs after Bogle left. Except Vanguard has had stupid sector funds forever. It has had active funds for forever. It has had active bonds funds in the 1980s, when Bogle was the CEO. They started their junk bond fund in 1978! Active funds like PRIMECAP and STAR and Explorer were launched under Bogle. He may have repeatedly written about only investing in the US but he had no problem launching active international funds like VWIGX.nisiprius wrote: ↑Thu Sep 16, 2021 6:30 amI may be wrong--I don't know where to find old annual reports--but I don't believe it ever held meaningful quantities of actual precious metal, although it was allowed to by the fund rules. By the time I was paying attention, it was something like 99% stocks (precious metal equity), with some microscopic holding of platinum.AlohaJoe wrote: ↑Thu Sep 16, 2021 5:44 amJack Bogle launched Vanguard's precious metals fund in 1984. I think it was actively managed, too.Kevin K wrote: ↑Tue Sep 14, 2021 4:05 pm Never thought I'd see the day. Gold bullion next month?
https://advisors.vanguard.com/insights/ ... 6632010697
All of which is fine by me. But people act shocked -- SHOCKED! -- when they see Vanguard launch some new weird fund and pretend it has never happened before.
I wish people would be actually realistic with Vanguard.
Passive investing: not about making big bucks but making profits. Active investing: not about beating the market but meeting goals. Speculation: not about timing the market but taking profitable risks.
Re: Vanguard recommends commodities to combat sudden inflation
Okay, that is what I suspected. I wonder is someone could take the commodities one by one and post performance information.willthrill81 wrote: ↑Thu Sep 16, 2021 10:35 pmVanguard's VCMDX fund is up 31% YTD vs. the S&P 500's 20%.
What this does tell me, is that if this inflation is more than (cough, cough) transitory, that Vanguard is right. For the record, I am not rushing out to buy commodities, but I might stock up on toilet paper which seems to be the solution to about every crisis.
A fool and his money are good for business.
Re: Vanguard recommends commodities to combat sudden inflation
Let's not forget used cars. The guy who lived around the corner from me where I grew up who had 50 Pintos stacked up on top of each other in his back yard finally found the black swan he was waiting for. And let's LOL in advance that "the guy" probably lived in dozens of different places in the US!
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Re: Vanguard recommends commodities to combat sudden inflation
Practical commodities (one that I can use directly) are those that I buy. If I want wheat, I buy a can of wheat that keeps for over 10 years. There is a spike in the price of wheat and other grains, and you must have grain? Break out the can and save yourself money. Risk, yes. But you at least get some benefit if the price collapses.stan1 wrote: ↑Fri Sep 17, 2021 5:03 pm Let's not forget used cars. The guy who lived around the corner from me where I grew up who had 50 Pintos stacked up on top of each other in his back yard finally found the black swan he was waiting for. And let's LOL in advance that "the guy" probably lived in dozens of different places in the US!
Seriously, someone must buy the commodity for the price to actually go up. The better hedge is to hold stable goods that you will use. E.g. I cannot use crude oil directly (let alone 50 used cars).
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Re: Vanguard recommends commodities to combat sudden inflation
Whether or not the inflation turns out to be transitory as an outcome should have no bearing on the evaluation the appropriateness of the portfolio recommendation.nedsaid wrote: What this does tell me, is that if this inflation is more than (cough, cough) transitory, that Vanguard is right. For the record, I am not rushing out to buy commodities, but I might stock up on toilet paper which seems to be the solution to about every crisis.
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Re: Vanguard recommends commodities to combat sudden inflation
Quite true. But again, I question whether Vanguard would have made this recommendation at all, much less our discussing it, if recent inflation had been 2% annualized.Northern Flicker wrote: ↑Sat Sep 18, 2021 12:03 amWhether or not the inflation turns out to be transitory as an outcome should have no bearing on the evaluation the appropriateness of the portfolio recommendation.nedsaid wrote: What this does tell me, is that if this inflation is more than (cough, cough) transitory, that Vanguard is right. For the record, I am not rushing out to buy commodities, but I might stock up on toilet paper which seems to be the solution to about every crisis.
It's remarkably easy for recency bias to impact our thinking.
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Re: Vanguard recommends commodities to combat sudden inflation
This article recommending the strategy appeared on the Vanguard web site in June 2019 before the Covid disruptions of supply chains started stoking inflation:
https://personal.vanguard.com/pdf/ISGCTIPS.pdf
So, you don't have to question if they would have done what you suggest, because they already had.
https://personal.vanguard.com/pdf/ISGCTIPS.pdf
So, you don't have to question if they would have done what you suggest, because they already had.
Re: Vanguard recommends commodities to combat sudden inflation
Except that most people here assume an Equity Risk Premium, low inflation, and low interest rates. Hopefully, we all have inflation protection built into our portfolios but I can tell you that annual 5% inflation would change some things. To some degree, we need to respond to changes in the economy and the markets as we live in a dynamic and not a static environment. The Maginot Line was great for defending against World War I fought all over again but what France needed for World War II were Armored Divisions and thorough schooling in tank tactics. The 2020's are not the 1970's, the economy and the markets have changed a lot since then. I am not a believer in a static view of portfolio construction, not saying you have to reallocate your portfolio every time you read a compelling book, but it seems weird to never, ever consider changes your portfolio.Northern Flicker wrote: ↑Sat Sep 18, 2021 12:03 amWhether or not the inflation turns out to be transitory as an outcome should have no bearing on the evaluation the appropriateness of the portfolio recommendation.nedsaid wrote: What this does tell me, is that if this inflation is more than (cough, cough) transitory, that Vanguard is right. For the record, I am not rushing out to buy commodities, but I might stock up on toilet paper which seems to be the solution to about every crisis.
People in my lifetime have gone from investing in individual securities to active mutual funds to indexed funds to indexed ETFs. Lots has changed from when I started in the 1980's. The first index fund wasn't even available until 1976. Should someone who started investing in the 1970's never have changed their portfolios? Gosh, we would all be at full service brokerages paying 2% to 3% commissions to buy and sell and paying 8 1/2% loads to buy our stock mutual funds.
Not saying the Equity Risk Premium will go away for good, but markets can experience long periods of time where stock markets can be flat, the last time was 2000-2013. The 2000's were a different market than the 1990's.
Yes, I know that people will say "Oh Ned, you are recommending market timing." Just saying is that if we have higher sustained inflation that a lot of the assumptions behind our portfolios will change.
The question then is how much the response should be. I would think that someone just maybe ought to give thought to adding TIPS to the portfolio. There might be other things that one could do. Don't think you need to completely revamp the portfolio but one ought to think about how the ground has shifted under their feet.
My gosh, my allocation to bonds has changed since 1999, after all I am 62 now and not 40. I have about 36% bonds and cash now instead of 6% way back then. Things have changed and I have responded. I am not a spring chicken any more.
For the record, I am not buying commodities at this time. I might modestly increase my allocation to TIPS. I already own REITs and have a Value tilt in my portfolio.
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Re: Vanguard recommends commodities to combat sudden inflation
By the time you have the information that we have persistent 5% inflation, it will be too late to protect against that particular outcome. Increasing the inflation protection of a portfolio protects against future inflation being higher than expected, regardless of what asset mix is used.nedsaid wrote: Except that most people here assume an Equity Risk Premium, low inflation, and low interest rates. Hopefully, we all have inflation protection built into our portfolios but I can tell you that annual 5% inflation would change some things. To some degree, we need to respond to changes in the economy and the markets as we live in a dynamic and not a static environment.
Re: Vanguard recommends commodities to combat sudden inflation
I remember the 1970's and all the discussion I had with my folks regarding inflation, to my Mom and Dad, inflation was Public Enemy Number One. So I have kept this in mind as I have invested over the years. My portfolio invests in International Stocks and Bonds, contains REITs above market weight, has TIPS, and has a couple of Natural Resource Stocks. So far, all I have done recently is modestly increase my TIPS.Northern Flicker wrote: ↑Sat Sep 18, 2021 2:09 pmBy the time you have the information that we have persistent 5% inflation, it will be too late to protect against that particular outcome. Increasing the inflation protection of a portfolio protects against future inflation being higher than expected, regardless of what asset mix is used.nedsaid wrote: Except that most people here assume an Equity Risk Premium, low inflation, and low interest rates. Hopefully, we all have inflation protection built into our portfolios but I can tell you that annual 5% inflation would change some things. To some degree, we need to respond to changes in the economy and the markets as we live in a dynamic and not a static environment.
Hopefully, we all have "all weather" portfolios, I don't think you need a lot of funds to do this, that should weather all market conditions. This is easier said than done. Point being is that we should look ahead and not just respond every time something happens.
I get what you say about efficient markets but there gets to be a point where we should consider changes as the economy and the markets change. Not sure when is the best time to do this or how much one should do in response.
Ray Dalio's "All Weather" portfolio that he recommended to Tony Robins for individual investors was very bond heavy. Not sure how such a heavy bond allocation would work out today, higher inflation will be very hard on bonds.
What I am objecting to is for someone to set their portfolio and then never deviate from it. All kinds of things change and what was appropriate 10 years ago might not be appropriate today, the most important change being life circumstances.
A fool and his money are good for business.