YTD: S&P -18.16%; Tactical Growth -1.58% (Manager Explains How)
Webinar—On Recording
To sign up for this webinar, click on the following link: https://pomplanning.net/5-tactical-strategies
Download the 2022 DALBAR Study
If you have not yet downloaded the 2022 DALBAR Study for FREE. (a study that quantifies what the “average investor” has earned over the last 1, 3, 5, 10, and 20 years in equities, a 60/40 mix of stocks and bonds, and AGG), you can do so by clicking on the following:
https://pomplanning.net/2022-dalbar-study
What is a “tactically” managed strategy? A broad definition is that a tactical strategy is one where money is moved between different asset classes (or different stocks in an asset class) to take advantage of pricing anomalies. Most can go to cash (and some can short or go inverted) if their signals indicate that’s the best way to AVOID large downturns.
I’ll admit, finding “good” tactical strategies are hard to find. But I’ve been lucky over the years to find a handful of really good tactical managers. To learn about the managers I recommend (and ones you can get access to in our RIA (www.pomplanning.net) and in a TAMP), click on the following link:
Five Tactical Strategies You Should Review
With the market in a tailspin, maybe it’s time advisors who DON’T use tactical strategies should consider doing so (which is the reason for this newsletter)?
While the title of the newsletter is about a tactical “growth” strategy, the firm that offers it also offers conservative, moderate conservative, moderate, and moderate growth tactical strategies.
Here are the numbers for three of them vs. their benchmark YTD (as of May 19th):
Hindsight is 20-20, but I’m sure your clients wish some of their assets in such strategies.
Tactical usually lags in an up market. See the same three strategies going back 10 years:
Two of the three did better than the benchmarks and while the aggressive didn’t beat the S&P 500, the OnPointe Risk Score of the strategy was only 35 vs. 72 for the S&P 500 (meaning it generated very good returns with significantly less risk!).
Summary
Again, I’ll admit that most tactical strategies are NOT very good. But when you find good ones, you can really save yourself and your clients a lot of sleepless nights.
Oh, and by the way, if you consider yourself a fiduciary, don’t you have a duty to review these types of strategies for potential use in your client’s portfolios? Hmm…something to think about (and a reason to sign up to attend the webinar on recording).