In the investment world, there's an age-old saying about never getting something for nothing. Yet, proper diversification comes remarkably close to this investment holy grail -offering the potential to enhance returns while simultaneously reducing risk. But here's the catch: true diversification is far more nuanced than simply spreading investments across stocks and bonds.

The Psychology of Risk: Why Stability Matters More Than You Think

Many long-term investors dismiss short-term volatility with a wave of the hand: "I'm in it for the long haul, so why should I care about the bumps along the way?" This perspective, while common, overlooks a crucial reality of human psychology. When your portfolio takes a dramatic dive, even the most steadfast investor might find their resolve wavering. These emotional responses -the urge to sell during downturns or chase performance- can devastate long-term returns.

Moreover, high volatility creates another, often overlooked challenge: timing risk. The more volatile your portfolio, the greater the impact of your entry point on your investment outcomes. A smoother return profile isn't just about comfort, it's about creating a sustainable investment strategy you can actually stick with through market cycles.

The Mathematics of Diversification: A Deeper Look

Picture this: you have multiple investment opportunities, each offering similar long-term returns but with different risk profiles. As you combine these investments, something remarkable happens, but the magic depends entirely on how these investments relate to each other.

When investments are highly correlated, adding more assets quickly hits a point of diminishing returns. You might as well stop at five different investments. However, when you find truly uncorrelated assets, the diversification benefits continue to grow significantly, even beyond 25 different investments. The key difference? The same expected return, but with dramatically reduced volatility.

The figure below will illustrate this effect in more detail. Let us assume we have several asset classes in which we can invest. They all have the same expected return over the long run but come with short-term risks. In practice, this risk could be either correlated or idiosyncratic.

Alternativesportfolio_volatility

We can see that the lower the correlation, the greater the effect of increasing the number of asset classes in the portfolio. In a perfectly uncorrelated scenario, we could add 25 or more different asset classes and benefit significantly from diversification, whereas with high correlation, the diversification effect is already exhausted with five or fewer different asset classes.

Remember, we assumed that all our asset classes have the same expected return over the long run, so all versions of the portfolio above have the exact same expected return. The difference lies in the diversified portfolio delivering this return steadily month by month, while the less diversified portfolio would experience significantly more fluctuations and periods of underperformance. This is why diversification has a significant effect on the Sharpe ratio, as seen in this chart:

Alternativessharpe_ratio

Beyond Traditional Asset Classes: The Alternative Advantage

Traditional diversification has two main challenges:

1. Limited Options: Conventional asset classes are too few for effective diversification.

2. Crisis Correlation: During market stress, traditional assets often move together, reducing diversification benefits.

Alternative investments address these issues by accessing different risk premiums and alpha sources. However, they require careful evaluation. Understanding why assets are uncorrelated is crucial to avoid increased correlation during market stress. Let's examine the building blocks of investment returns:

 

Return drivers

 

Classical market risk premiums, like the equity or credit premium, offer compensation for certain risks and are easily accessible through broad asset class investments.

Alternative premiums are harder to access, often requiring shorting and relying on price differences. They may compensate for risks like volatility or be driven by behavioral biases.

While offering low correlation to market risk premiums, they have limitations: cyclical performance increases timing risk, and correlation can spike during market stress, necessitating a deep understanding.

The Alpha Factor: Active Management's Role

To benefit from diversification, investors need uncorrelated return streams, known as alpha, which are returns beyond traditional risk premiums. Alpha can be achieved through superior asset selection or market timing, requiring active management.

There are two active management strategies: Long-Only and Alternatives. Long-only managers add alpha by overweighting assets but remain correlated with traditional premiums, limiting diversification.

Alternative Managers use strategies like relative value investing to generate uncorrelated alpha, offering true diversification. Alternatives, such as absolute return strategies, are essential for uncorrelated returns that lower portfolio risk.

Not all alternatives provide desired diversification. Some, like private equity, may still correlate with traditional assets during downturns. Effective diversification requires strategies with low correlation, even in market stress, such as Absolute Return Strategies accessed through:

  1. Hedge Funds
  2. Absolute Return UCITS
  3. Quantitative Investment Strategies (QIS)

Is It Really That Easy?

No, it's not that easy. Absolute return strategies are crucial for diversification, but investors must evaluate a manager's alpha potential. Few managers consistently generate stable alpha, with only 30% repeating outperformance annually. Many rely on traditional market risk premiums to boost returns. For instance, UCITS Hedge Funds often have an equity beta of 0.54, indicating significant reliance on traditional equity premiums. Unfortunately, higher beta often correlates with lower alpha, as we have shown in this study.

The Path Forward: Building a Resilient Portfolio

To harness the full power of diversification, consider these key principles:

1. Look beyond traditional assets to include truly uncorrelated alternative strategies

2. Focus on liquid investments that allow for active management

3. Implement strong risk management practices

4. Maintain flexibility to adjust allocations as market conditions evolve

We have demonstrated the potential of such an investment approach in a study focusing on QIS, which could offer impressive returns and largely benefits from diversification. However, this approach is not limited to QIS and can be adapted to other investments as long as they offer sufficient liquidity. 

Conclusion

While achieving effective diversification requires more effort than simply buying a mix of stocks and bonds, the potential reward -a more stable, robust portfolio capable of weathering various market conditions- makes it worth pursuing. In today's complex market environment, this sophisticated approach to diversification isn't just an advantage, it's becoming a necessity for long-term investment success.

 

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