The stock market downturn wasn’t great but not out of the ordinary as far as bear markets go. It was relatively calm in comparison to history’s worst crashes.
The average bear market since 1928 is a loss of more than 36%, so the 25% peak-to-trough drawdown in 2022 wasn’t the end of the world.
What made the 2022 bear so devastating was the bond side of the portfolio. Usually, when stocks fall, high-quality bonds act as a portfolio stabilizer. This time around, bonds were the reason stocks fell.
Just take a look at how bonds (10 year Treasuries) performed every time the S&P 500 has had a down year since 1928:
Bonds had fallen in the same year as stocks a handful of times before1 but those fixed income losses were insubstantial. There had never been a year in which stocks and Treasuries fell double-digits simultaneously.
It was brutal.
That type of environment could happen again in a rapidly rising rate environment but you can see from the chart that 2022 was an outlier, not the norm.
The average down year for the U.S. stock market is a loss of almost 14%. In those same down years, Treasuries have averaged a gain of more than 4%. And that number includes the downright awful year that was 2022.
Most of the time bonds act as a good hedge against bad years in the stock market even if they’re not a good hedge against bad years in the stock market all the time.
Unfortunately, there are no perfect hedges. Nothing works all the time the way you would like.
That’s risk for you.
There are exceptions to every rule.
If we are in a situation where the economy is slowing, disinflation (or even deflation) is the current trend and we finally go into a recession at some point, high-quality bonds will likely provide diversification benefits.
Bonds have yield again too.
There are no guarantees. Rising rates and inflation are not a great combination for bonds.
But high-quality fixed income can help protect your portfolio from stock market volatility and recessions if and when they strike again.
A Wealth of Common Sense is a blog that focuses on wealth management, investments, financial markets and investor psychology. I manage portfolios for institutions and individuals at Ritholtz Wealth Management LLC. More about me here. For disclosure information please see here.
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