How to Prepare for Market Volatility Before It Strikes Again

When markets are rising, investors don’t always prepare for turbulence. Yet we think the best time to build a defensive plan for an equity allocation is before the volatility strikes.

Investors who seek defensive equity portfolios might think they need to sacrifice long-term return potential to reduce volatility. However, they may be surprised to discover how a strategy targeting stocks that lose less in a downturn can in fact beat the market over time.

Most investors implicitly understand the concept of risk. The framework was famously laid out in the capital asset pricing model (CAPM) of the 1960s, which explained expected return as a function of both firm-specific risk and an asset’s sensitivity to the broader market. Fundamentally, however, it’s grounded in a simple concept: investors expect to be compensated for assuming more risk. If risk had no payoff, we’d all just keep our assets in cash and call it a day.

Relative vs. Absolute Risk in a Choppy Market

Too often, investment managers are consumed with relative risk—tracking their performance against a market-cap-weighted benchmark index. This can conflict with what really matters to investors: absolute performance and how well an investment addresses long-term financial goals.

The issue becomes especially thorny during bouts of market volatility, such as the 2022 downturn. Amid stubborn inflation and economic slowing last year, the S&P 500 retreated by 18.1% and the MSCI World fell by 16.0% in local-currency terms. Although stocks have recovered sharply in 2023, the potential for more volatility is a clear and present danger amid macroeconomic uncertainty and ongoing concern about inflation and high-interest rates.

When markets are rising, investors don’t always prepare for turbulence. Yet we think the best time to build a defensive plan for an equity allocation is before volatility strikes.