Asset Allocation Interactive at 10 Years: The Good, the Not Too Bad, and the Ugly

Key Points

  • Research Affiliates launched Asset Allocation Interactive (AAI) 10 years ago as a free source for capital market expectations (CMEs) based on current fundamentals.

  • The recent performance of the U.S. stock market and the 60/40 portfolio has bucked the trend of fundamentals and led many to question the usefulness of long-term CMEs. This skepticism, combined with AAI’s 10-year anniversary, offers an opportunity to assess the value of fundamentally derived CMEs.

  • The Good: AAI’s CMEs of average returns largely fall in the middle of the distribution of realized returns over the past 30 years across both five- and 10-year time horizons.

  • The Not Too Bad: The rank order of AAI’s expectations has anticipated realized asset returns in the last 10 years, with just a few notable outliers in equity markets.

  • The Ugly: Forecasting is an art as well as a science, and AAI’s results highlight areas for future research, particularly in its currency expectations.

Introduction

Capital market expectations (CMEs) are a key input in the strategic asset allocation processes of asset owners of all sizes. Long ago, we recognized that many asset owners were ignoring current environment fundamentals and simply using historical average returns, or historical risk premia, to estimate the future return of the assets in their portfolios. Although unconditional views of history can help forecast across disciplines, strict assumptions about the nature of returns often don’t translate to financial data.

Research Affiliates introduced its Asset Allocation Interactive (AAI) online tool 10 years ago to provide investors with CMEs that price assets based on their current fundamentals. AAI makes CMEs across a wide range of public asset markets publicly available in a timely manner free of charge and with a transparent methodology. Our CMEs are updated monthly and cover more than 140 assets converted into six global currencies.

This fall, AAI evolved beyond simple asset classes and introduced long-term CMEs for a set of systematic equity strategies. We plan to grow this list, both in equities and other asset classes, in the months ahead to give investors a view of return expectations above and beyond the standard market (beta) exposures for the strategies that make up their portfolios.

While an important milestone, AAI’s 10th birthday is not the main focus here. Rather, AAI’s launch in 2014 corresponded with the early stages of the phenomenal bull market in U.S. stocks and bonds that has led many to question the utility of fundamentally motivated CMEs. Addressing these doubts, through the prism of a variety of asset class CMEs, is the chief motivation of this analysis.