Improve the diversification of your 60/40 portfolio with real assets like gold, commodities, and infrastructure—especially now that bonds are no longer the go-to for offsetting stock volatility.
It’s tough to face a challenge when you’re not feeling 100%. Nobody wants to run a race with shin splints, interview for a job with a rotten cold, or house hunt during an uncertain time at work.
But that’s where the 60/40 portfolio finds itself—facing rising macro uncertainty at a time when its ability to mitigate equity downside has been sapped due to elevated bond and stock correlation.
Investors have long relied on bonds to trade in the opposite direction of stocks to offset equity market drawdowns. But surging inflation and rising interest rates turned the typical stock/bond relationship on its head in 2022—and stocks and bonds have been positively correlated ever since (Figure 1).
That means bonds offer only a fraction of the protection against equity volatility that they used to. And that’s especially problematic now, with monetary and fiscal policy on a collision course.
The Federal Reserve (Fed) is waiting to cut interest rates until the data points to inflation being more firmly under control. Meanwhile, the Trump administration’s tariff policies threaten to stoke inflation, and its expansionary fiscal agenda likely will increase the US’s already unsustainable debt, stressing bond markets.
That stress opens the door for inflation-sensitive liquid alternatives like real assets—physical, tangible investments whose value is derived from their intrinsic qualities and actual use. These include:
Investing in real assets can’t eliminate market uncertainty. But building a 5% to 10% real assets allocation—drawing equally from stocks and bonds and/or using elevated cash balances—can help diversify your 60/40 portfolio and better position it for today’s challenging environment.
Real assets may help keep your portfolio on track with:
Within real assets, gold and commodities have low correlations to a 60/40 portfolio because they’re physical assets. REITs, infrastructure equities, and natural resources equities have higher correlations because they represent certain type of ownership of a business and trade more like stocks (Figure 2).
Since economic fundamentals of real assets, such as the market price of commodities and cash flows of companies producing oil and gas, are highly sensitive to inflation trends, their strong performance during an inflationary environment, especially during unexpected higher inflation periods, provides investors a powerful inflation management tool to offset traditional assets’ vulnerability to inflation risks. (Figure 3).
Moreover, commodities, gold, and inflation-linked bonds may also mitigate equity downside during times of rising inflationary pressures. In 2022, for example, broad commodities and natural resource equities rose 26% and 10% respectively at a time when the S&P® 500 was down 18%.1
ETFs are expanding access to these once-exclusive strategies. More than half of investors familiar with ETFs (51%) say ETFs provide an efficient, cost-effective way to invest in alternatives.2
And the unique benefits ETFs deliver to investors extend across real assets:
The following SPDR ETFs can help you improve the diversification of your 60/40 portfolio to potentially offset the impact of inflation by pursuing real return.
For more insight, take a look at our Multi-Asset Solutions.