An Awful First Half For Stocks The first half of 2022 featured a perfect storm of headwinds for stocks: by January, inflation was at a 40-year high.
ICYMI: We’ve got 1982’s inflation—will we get 1982’s stock valuation? Historical data is inauspicious if this level of inflation continues.$SPY $TLT $LQDhttps://t.co/VBXufo6vMVThen came Russia's invasion of the Ukraine in late February, and, following that, Western sanctions on Russia that exacerbated already-high inflation.— Portfolio Armor (@PortfolioArmor) January 16, 2022
Our sanctions against Russia � for its invasion of Ukraine � are hurting America �. What's the endgame?$WEAT $CORN $HAL $OXY https://t.co/svNGplmZjaAdd to that the Fed raising interest rates at the fastest pace in years, and we got the worst first half for the S&P 500 in sixty years.— Portfolio Armor (@PortfolioArmor) March 13, 2022
The S&P was down 20.6% in the first half of 2022, the worst start to a year for the index since 1962. $SPX pic.twitter.com/OMcX7yfP5oHow Our Approach Fared There are essentially two components to our hedged portfolio method:— Charlie Bilello (@charliebilello) June 30, 2022
- Selecting securities that we estimate are likely to do well over the next six months, relative to the cost of hedging them.
- Hedging them in case we end up being wrong about them doing well.
Screen capture via Portfolio Armor on 1/26/2022.
So, by late January, the selecting securities component of our approach had started to click into gear. That wasn't the case at the beginning of the year though.
Selecting The Wrong Securities at the End of 2021 As 2021 ended, we got the security selection component completely wrong. You can see this from this hedged portfolio our system presented to users on December 30th of 2021:
Screen captures via Portfolio Armor on 12/30/2021.
That portfolio was designed for investors unwilling to risk a decline of more than 9% over the next six months. Only two of the underlying securities in it, Enphase Energy, Inc. (NASDAQ: ENPH) and the iPath Series B Bloomberg Coffee Subindex Total Return ETN (ARCA:JO), posted positive returns in the first half; other names there, such as Nvidia, Inc. (NASDAQ: NVDA) plummeted (by about 50%, in Nvidia's case).
Protection Against Being Wrong Fortunately, being hedged acted as protection against being wrong. Here's how that portfolio did over the first half. Net of trading and hedging costs, we were down 5.79%, while the market-tracking SPDR S&P 500 Trust ETF (ARCA:SPY (NYSE:SPY)) was down 20.53% over the same period.
You can tell from the "Put Option Value" column above that ENPH and JO finished in the green, because the put options on them were worthless at the end. In contrast, the position with highest put option value at the end, Affirm Holdings, Inc. (NASDAQ: AFRM), was down about 80% in the first half.
Hopefully, we won't need protection against being wrong in the second half, but it's good to have it in case we are.
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