Trump Is Making the 60/40 Portfolio Great Again

The post-election stock market is already giving investors a wild ride. Big individual stock selloffs, massive rallies, and a dizzying array of market narratives built on Wall Street’s best attempts to read President-elect Donald Trump’s mind. All told, the S&P 500 Index is up about 3% since Election Day, but the numbers don’t do justice to the tenuous feeling around all of it. That combination of policy uncertainty with some of the highest valuations since 2021 may spur renewed interest in risk-management strategies. Fortunately, there’s an easy one at everyone’s disposal.

Before attempting to Trump-proof any portfolio, investors should ask themselves a couple of key questions. First, can you keep your political biases in check? If not, you probably need to adjust your risk exposure. With Trump, you either love the guy or hate him, and investors are at their best when they’re at their most dispassionate. I worry that a toxic mix of politics and market volatility might induce people to do something foolish like sell at market bottoms. Or go all-in at tops. One of the most important aspects of a sound investing strategy is finding a way to sleep at night so you can ultimately stay invested.

Second, do you have the skill sets to see around corners in a Trump-dominated market? Even in the pre-Trump era, many investors would have told you that political soothsaying wasn’t their core competency. But Trump is a uniquely unpredictable politician who takes office with a potentially paradigm-shattering agenda and a lame duck’s temerity. Is his talk of 10%-20% universal tariffs; 60% duties on China; and mass deportations a negotiating tactic? An opening salvo? Or is he reckless and unbridled enough to really carry them out at scale against the backdrop of already-elevated inflation and high interest rates? And to what extent will his cabinet, members of Congress, the judicial branch and the financial markets manage to check any excesses? Some people might think they have a legitimate “edge” in answering those questions, but I haven’t encountered many I’d bet on.

If the elections have you jumpy and disoriented, the easiest solution might be a version of the classic 60/40 portfolio of stocks and bonds. Traditional stock-bond portfolios have gotten a bad wrap since the punishing dual-asset-class selloff of 2022, but those were very different times. Back then, bonds offered very little income to cushion the blow and they were essentially moving in lockstep with equities. Today, stock-bond correlations are turning negative again.

les correlated

And yields are close to their highest since the financial crisis. Bonds now pay investors much more, even as stock “yields” have gotten stingier and stingier. High valuations are never reason in and of themselves to expect a correction, but they certainly have a habit of making pullbacks more painful.

bond yields