Hi all,
Syfe 17% DR user here. And would like to share my thoughts based on my limited experience in quantitative research and trying to identify alpha factors.
Right now, all of Syfe's portfolios are nett short position (ie. betting that the market index will go down further).
Syfe uses a variety of bond ETFs in their portfolios namely SHY (least volatile), IEF and TLT(most volatile). They may all be bond ETFs but they are very different in their daily % change characteristics. One could say that TLT performs like a leveraged bond asset. The chart shapes for all bond ETFs look identical. Bonds and sometimes gold are 'safe haven' assets so they are usually (but not always) inversely-corelated with the S&P.
Do note that in the higher risk portfolios(13-25% DR), the bulk of the bond ETFs are in TLT which is the highest volatility bond ETF in Syfe's arsenal. So when the market indices do go down, the capital value of your bonds should go up. DO NOT think of TLT bonds as stable assets!
Nobody can predict where the market will go, but if we look back into historical market crashes, the average peak-to-trough is simply no where near 2 months. The 1998 crash began in July 2000 and only bottomed out in Aug 2002; while the 2008 GFC began in Aug 07 and only bottomed out in Jan 09. From what I've read, the 'dead cat bounce' that we are seeing in the recent mini bull run has happened several times in historical crashes.
So be patient, wait for your bonds to capture the market downside if there is any more.
The tricky and emotional part about investing is one tends to get impatient when things don't go your way. From TS's updates in Page 1, the results are still very much 50/50 so don't get too upset about which platform/strategy is better than the other over the long run.
To other readers: what are your views of the market? Do you think the market bloodbath is over? or do you forsee more bankruptcies and continued loss of consumer confidence?
In investment...the closest thing you can get to a free lunch is diversification. Why not allocate 50/50 to both strategies and rebalance annually?
