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Uncertainty and the correlation conundrum

Why it’s time to look at liquid alternatives in a new light

The current macro environment poses significant challenges for investors. Our AIMS Target Return team explain why a less conventional approach can help maintain portfolio resilience and unlock return opportunities.

Read this article to understand:

  • Why the current macroeconomic backdrop is affecting the equity-bond relationship
  • How liquid alternatives can add diversification to 60/40 portfolios
  • The importance of building in portfolio-level resilience

We are in a challenging macro environment. Uncertainty around US trade and defence policy is leading companies to reshore supply chains and pushing countries in Europe and Asia to boost investments in defence. All this is maintaining inflation at uncomfortable levels.

One of the key consequences is instability in the bond/equity correlation. This will pose challenges for investors relying on traditional balanced portfolios, suggesting a greater reliance on other sources of portfolio diversification.

In this article, we assess what the current macro environment means for asset allocation and the potential role of liquid alternative strategies, including our own AIMS Target Return (AIMS TR) strategy, in offering benefits traditional portfolios are unable to access.

Rising inflation and the shifting macroeconomic landscape

Beginning with the global financial crisis and ramped up during COVID-19, easy monetary policy coincided with the longest equity bull run in history, aided by the tailwind of low inflation. Bonds played their traditional role of safe haven in dampening volatility, but also provided strong returns.

Since 2022, however, not only have we seen a reversal in the bond/equity relationship, but bonds have also become more volatile relative to their history than equities, as shown in Figure 1. This has meant that strategies that rely heavily on combining these assets have found no safe haven.

Figure 1: Significant increase in bond market volatility with an added cost for duration risk (per cent)

Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future performance

Note: Global equities represented by the MSCI Country All World Index (USD). Global Bonds is represented by Bloomberg Global Aggregate TR USD.

Source: Aviva Investors, Bloomberg. Data as of April 30, 2025.

Correlations have gone from being generally negative from the early 2000s to becoming neutral or even positive since inflation started rising in 2022. The correlation of asset returns is an important consideration for constructing diversified portfolios, hedging strategies and managing risk, and recent trends have led many commentators to speculate as to whether the era of the 60/40 portfolio has ended.

Figure 2 shows the relationship between inflation and equities/bonds correlation from the 1970s to the 2020s. For simplicity, we focus on the US, specifically correlation between the S&P 500 and ten-year Treasuries. However, this analysis can also be applied to other regions.

We see a clear relationship between correlation and inflation, with inflation typically far higher pre-2000 – and from 2022 onwards – than in the 2000s and 2010s. While most of the pre-2000 period saw positive correlation, 2000-2020 is characterised by negative correlation, which balanced portfolios have become accustomed to.

Figure 2: Equities-bonds correlation versus US inflation (per cent)

Note: Equity-bond correlation is calculated using monthly returns with equities represented by the S&P 500 index (SPTR Index) and bonds represented by US Treasuries (Bloomberg Global Agg US Treasuries Index), over an 18-month measurement period.

Source: Aviva Investors, Bloomberg. Data as of February 28, 2025.

Rising inflation has a direct negative impact on nominal bonds and potentially equities as both equity and bond prices can be thought of as being determined by a series of discounted future cashflows. Rising inflation against a backdrop of weak economic growth is a particular pain point for investors.

As such, building portfolios that are risk diversified, flexible and able to preserve capital through varying market conditions is more crucial than ever. Increasingly, the answer may not lie in the traditional split of equities and bonds, but a combination of different, resilient strategies – some of which may be less conventional in nature.

Liquid alternatives in a new light?

The long bull run in equities and bonds caused most non-directional alternative strategies to lag in performance, leading investors to question their viability. However, the current market landscape requires a more considered appraisal of the role of alternatives.

Persistent inflation and policy uncertainty come with greater dispersion and opportunities to generate alpha

Persistent inflation and policy uncertainty – and the subsequent rise in volatility – come with greater dispersion and opportunities to generate alpha. Accessing return drivers outside of traditional long equity and credit markets can enhance returns as well as provide diversification.

To demonstrate this, we examine the impact of including an allocation to AIMS TR of up to ten per cent in a diversified portfolio of developed and emerging market equities and bonds over multiple time horizons (Figure 3). Over a three-year period, its inclusion provides an uplift of between about 70 and 125 basis points, depending on the level of volatility targeted, which provides an appreciable benefit when considering the impact on compounded returns. This benefit – of around 60-90 basis points annualised – can also be seen over a longer five-year horizon.

Figure 3: AIMS TR efficient frontier analysis: Three and five-year daily data (per cent)

Past performance is not a reliable guide to future performance. The value of an investment and any income from it can go down as well as up. Investors may not get back the original amount invested.

Note: Poly = polynomial best-fit line. Global equities is represented by the Bloomberg ticker MSCI ACWI Index, Emerging market equities by MXEF Index, US Treasuries by GOVT US Equity, Global Agg bonds by LEGATRUU Index.

Source: Aviva Investors, Bloomberg. Data as of June 13, 2025.

Figure 4 breaks down returns within AIMS TR by risk drivers over its three-year investment horizon. The portfolio generated meaningful gains across duration strategies, from both positive and negative duration exposures. In addition, the ability to access non-traditional markets such as volatility contributed positively to performance.

Figure 4: AIMS TR three-year performance by risk driver (per cent)

Past performance is not a reliable guide to future performance. The value of an investment and any income from it can go down as well as up. Investors may not get back the original amount invested.

Note: Performance contribution is shown gross of all fees. Inception date July 1, 2014.

Source: Aviva Investors. Data as of June 13, 2025.

Global macro multi-strategy solutions such as AIMS TR can provide greater risk factor diversification and access to a larger investment universe with more flexibility than simple 60/40 portfolios. Additionally, their broader macroeconomic view drives both idiosyncratic idea generation and portfolio construction. This differs from a traditional strategic asset allocation approach, meaning investors benefit from an additional level of diversification.

Building resilience into a multi-strategy portfolio

Investors can’t always be right. Maximising the probability of achieving excess returns through good times and bad requires a well-diversified and risk-controlled mix of strategies, with robust management of tail risk. This needs expertise in risk factor analysis and quantitative techniques, alongside diligent oversight.

Embedding diversification and resilience is a key area of focus in our AIMS TR investment process. The strategy is generally composed of 15 to 25 diversified strategies that can take both long and short views across the risk drivers shown in Figure 5.

Figure 5: Risk drivers

Risk drivers

Source: Aviva Investors, June 2025.

The strategies are categorised into the following three buckets:

  • Market return strategies are dynamic allocations to market directional positions, which are expected to perform well in rising markets (e.g., long equities and credit).
  • Opportunistic return strategies seek to capitalise on macro and idiosyncratic investment themes that are less dependent on the direction of the broader market (e.g., relative-value market-neutral trades).
  • Risk-reducing strategies help stabilise performance through capital preservation positions (e.g., long duration, tail hedging, systematic strategies).

Market Return: Resilient market directional positions

In the current macro environment, simple directional bets carry more risk. Solutions that can move away from static allocations using derivative overlays alongside dynamic scaling and market tilts should be able to mitigate some of those risks and improve their overall return profile. 

Qualitative judgement is required to decide whether the return source will continue to be rewarded

This is a feature of the Market Return section of the portfolio via risk-mitigating options structures and quantitative models. We believe this helps us better express macro-driven ideas in sector- or region-specific equity positions during rangebound markets or periods of volatility.

While the strategies may be systematic, there is considerable discretionary oversight as to when they are deployed. Models can isolate a return source from historical data, but qualitative judgement is required to decide whether the source will continue to be rewarded.

We believe the use of systematic models, overlaid with discretionary oversight to inform asset allocation and position management, enables investment views to be expressed more accurately and in a timely manner. This can lead to alpha generation with improved risk-return characteristics. While useful in all market cycles, such tools are particularly useful in an environment where natural risk-reducers are limited.

Opportunistic Return: Widening the investment opportunity set

The Opportunistic Return section focuses on strategies exhibiting a higher degree of market mispricing and/or a lower degree of correlation. AIMS TR goes beyond conventional asset classes to use nonconventional markets and techniques, including investing in volatility as a credit proxy and relative-value trades.

Considerable enhancements have been made to the AIMS TR investment process

Since mid-2018, considerable enhancements have been made to the AIMS TR investment process that involved investment into 3Ps – people, platform and process (see Survival of the fittest).1 One of the key focus areas was on improving the performance of, and expanding the investment toolkit within, the Opportunistic Return section.

The steps taken have delivered positive outcomes across different market conditions. As illustrated in Figure 6, since the investment process enhancements were fully embedded at the beginning of 2019, Opportunistic Return strategies in aggregate generated positive returns in 13 out of 18 consecutive quarters, which includes the COVID-induced market turmoil of Q1 2020, as well as the market volatility witnessed in 2022.

Figure 6: Quarterly performance of Opportunistic Return strategies since 2019 (per cent)

Past performance is not a reliable guide to future performance. The value of an investment and any income from it can go down as well as up. Investors may not get back the original amount invested.

Note: Performance contribution is shown gross of all fees.

Source: Aviva Investors. Data as of June 13, 2025.

Risk-reducing strategies: Diversifying away from traditional safe-havens

Sourcing robust strategies that can preserve capital is critical. Long duration, as many balanced portfolio investors are painfully aware, has not provided much protection recently. In the short to medium term, the path for interest rates remains uncertain as trade disruptions create both inflationary and recessionary pressures. This reduces the likely effectiveness of government bonds.

Over the last five years, shorting duration has, at times, proved an effective hedge against uncertain rate moves

With the changing correlation environment over the last five years, shorting duration has, at times, proved an effective hedge against uncertain rate moves, a position held within the Opportunistic section during 2022. This is not a stable long-term hedge, however. Should inflation concerns dissipate, we expect long bonds to revert to their traditional safe haven status. However, with uncertainty regarding inflation becoming persistent, our focus within the Risk-reducing section of the portfolio has been to embed tail-risk protection through discretionary options hedging strategies.

Systematic strategies are another area we have explored to improve the Risk-reducing section. Like the systematic value equities position held within the Opportunistic section, the strong balance sheet strategy is constructed as an equity relative-value structure but harnesses the quality factor through long positions in companies with strong balance sheets. This has worked especially well during periods of credit stress and rising defaults.

Currencies have historically offered portfolio protection. However, these require more active position management as varying rate cutting and hiking cycles amongst central banks have broken traditional safe-haven patterns. A prime example is the Bank of Japan, whose yield-curve control policy to suppress interest rates combined with low inflation saw the currency massively underperform the US dollar until 2025.

Portfolio-level resilience

Despite directional Market Return positions being a significant contributor to returns, the strategy’s portfolio construction has helped generate performance with relatively low beta to global equity markets, as demonstrated by the total line in Figure 7. An additional benefit of options implementation is it reduces equity market sensitivity. Therefore, even when the Market Return beta is higher, the actual sensitivity to equity markets is lower due to the convexity embedded in the portfolio.

Figure 7: Rolling weekly beta to global equities (MSCI ACWI), 2018-2024 (per cent)

Past performance is not a reliable guide to future performance. The value of an investment and any income from it can go down as well as up. Investors may not get back the original amount invested.

Note: AIMS TR Fund.

Source: Aviva Investors, Blackrock Aladdin, as of April 30, 2025.

Another measure to evaluate resilience is the ability to preserve capital through periods of market stress. Figure 8 illustrates the performance of AIMS TR during the ten worst rolling three-month periods of equity declines since the strategy’s inception; AIMS TR fared relatively well during the most difficult periods for equities.2

Figure 8: Performance of AIMS TR during ten worst rolling three-month equity declines (per cent)

Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future performance. The value of an investment and any income from it can go down as well as up. Investors may not get back the original amount invested.

Note: Performance contribution is shown gross of all fees, share class 2, mid-to-mid, in GBP, for AIMS TR OEIC. Gross performance, effect of fees will reduce overall performance. Inception date July 1, 2014. Global equities represented by the MSCI All Country World Equity Index (local currency). Ten worst rolling three-month equity declines since Fund inception as measured by the preceding three months to date shown on x-axis. 

Source: Aviva Investors. Data as of April 30, 2025.

Resilience requires alternative sources of returns

Investors are facing an uncertain market, macro and policy environment, which is materially impacting the bond/equity correlation.

AIMS TR harnesses expertise from a broad array of investment professionals to access a wide range of ideas

The diversification implications cannot be overstated. Resilient portfolios now require an ability to source other return drivers and implementation techniques capable of performing during periods of higher rates and equity and bond market volatility. 

AIMS TR, through its unconstrained approach, harnesses expertise from a broad array of investment professionals to access a wide range of ideas and expand potential sources of return and diversification.

We strongly believe its ability to access a much wider range of targeted implementation methods, as well as draw informed views on dynamic position management, is particularly valuable in this market environment. This combination offers resilience to an investor’s overall portfolio in a liquid and cost-effective manner.

References

  1. “Survival of the fittest: Resilience, persistence and AIMS Target Return”, Aviva Investors, August 7, 2024.
  2. Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future performance.

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Key risks

This is a summary of the key risks. For further information on the full risks and risk profiles of the Fund, please refer to the relevant KIID and Prospectus.

Investment and currency risk

The value of an investment and any income from it can go down as well as up and can fluctuate in response to changes in currency and exchange rates. Investors may not get back the original amount invested.

Derivatives risk

Investments can be made in derivatives, which can be complex and highly volatile. Derivatives may not perform as expected, meaning significant losses may be incurred. 

Illiquid securities risk

Some investments could be hard to value or to sell at a desired time, or at a price considered to be fair (especially in large quantities). As a result their prices can be volatile. 

Sustainable investing risk

The level of sustainability risk to which a portfolio is exposed, and therefore the value of its investments, may fluctuate depending on the investment opportunities identified by the Investment Manager.

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