5 Ways an Overlay Can Smooth Out a Rocky Market

Key Takeaways

  • During volatile markets, an overlay can make for a more comfortable investing experience
  • Key benefits of an overlay include liquidity management, dynamic allocation, risk management, cost efficiency and oversight and discipline
  • An overlay specialist that’s also an OCIO can provide additional value because they’ll have total visibility into your portfolio

When volatility ripped through markets last month, many investors scrambled to respond. Some wanted to quickly adjust specific security exposures. Others wanted to flee to cash or build in protection against additional downside moves. And some rushed to buy the dip.

At Russell Investments, we didn’t freak out—and neither did our overlay clients. Why? Because our comprehensive overlay services program made these types of requests easily achievable.

While the worst of the short-term volatility has faded, markets could easily turn on a dime again. Having an overlay in place the next time things sour could make for a much more comfortable investing experience. Here are five reasons to consider partnering with an overlay specialist before volatility strikes again.

1. Liquidity Management

In times of crisis, liquidity becomes paramount. In other words, cash is king. An overlay program allows investors to maintain full market exposure (beta) while holding a higher percentage of their portfolio in cash or highly liquid assets. Since derivatives are capital efficient instruments, only a small portion of cash is needed to obtain market exposure, making it one of the quickest ways to boost a portfolio’s liquidity profile. Furthermore, when volatility spikes, trading volumes tend to increase but liquidity (how much you can execute quickly) gets worse. This phenomenon is much more pronounced for physical assets, making derivatives the preferred instrument during market turbulence.

Key Benefits:

  • Hold more cash for liquidity purposes without experiencing cash drag.
  • Capital efficient derivatives are unfunded instruments that require less cash.
  • Derivatives tend to be more liquid than physicals, especially in stressed market conditions.

Example:

Redeeming from an overweight fixed income passive manager and replacing exposure synthetically via a total return swap to free up cash without altering the portfolio’s risk/return profile.