All Weather Fund

All Weather Fund

An all weather fund is a fund that tends to perform reasonably well during both favorable and unfavorable economic and market conditions. Actively managing the equity portion of the fund to take advantage of varying market conditions while maintaining steady returns for investors from fixed-income investments provides for balanced allocations that produce positive performance in all market conditions. Global risk allocation funds are a unique category because they adjust portfolio allocations by asset class to mitigate and offset losses in the high-risk equity market with greater allocations to high yielding fixed-income investments. All weather funds typically have flexible investment strategies that allow them to diversify across asset classes and utilize alternative techniques, such as sector rotation or macro-hedging, in order to manage for varying market changes. These funds have the flexibility to overweight long positions in times of market gains and overweight short positions in times of market losses.

All Weather funds are designed to perform well no matter how well, or not well, the market is performing.

What Is an All Weather Fund?

An all weather fund is a fund that tends to perform reasonably well during both favorable and unfavorable economic and market conditions. All weather funds typically have flexible investment strategies that allow them to diversify across asset classes and utilize alternative techniques, such as sector rotation or macro-hedging, in order to manage for varying market changes.

All Weather funds are designed to perform well no matter how well, or not well, the market is performing.
Balanced funds can be used as All Weather funds if they are balanced in a way that can "weather" downturns.
The most common form of an All Weather fund would be a market neutral form, where the fund doesn't take a stance on any one sector or issue.

All Weather Fund Explained

All weather funds use various investing strategies to achieve capital gains in all types of investing environments. Bridgewater is one hedge fund manager known for its all weather investing strategy. Numerous other funds also qualify because of the broad nature of the strategies included in the universe.

Balanced Funds

A balanced fund can be an all weather fund option. Take for example a simple balanced fund with a 60% equity and 40% fixed income portfolio allocation. Actively managing the equity portion of the fund to take advantage of varying market conditions while maintaining steady returns for investors from fixed-income investments provides for balanced allocations that produce positive performance in all market conditions.

Funds without specified allocations often tend to perform even better in all types of market conditions because of their flexibility to adjust asset allocations. These funds often make asset allocation bets according to their views on domestic or global risk. Global risk allocation funds are a unique category because they adjust portfolio allocations by asset class to mitigate and offset losses in the high-risk equity market with greater allocations to high yielding fixed-income investments.

Inversely, the reverse allocation is used when equity markets are trending higher. The flexibility to make asset class adjustments is a significant advantage that allows the fund to perform well in all types of markets.

The AllianceBernstein Global Risk Allocation Fund provides one example of a flexible global risk allocation product. In 2017 the Fund gained 12.06%. Since inception the Fund reports an annual return of 6.92%.

All Weather Strategies

All weather strategies also have the flexibility to deploy unique alternative techniques.

Long/Short

One strategy commonly used to produce gains in all market environments is a long/short strategy. These funds have the latitude to take both long and short positions. This allows them to buy investments they believe have upside potential and sell short securities they expect to depreciate in value. These funds have the flexibility to overweight long positions in times of market gains and overweight short positions in times of market losses.

Market Neutral

A market neutral strategy is another alternative technique that uses long/short positions. This varies from a typical long/short strategy since it seeks to benefit from paired trading that exploits potential arbitrage between matched securities. It achieves all weather market neutral gains because its strategy involves taking targeted pairs trade positions that lock in gains through the movement of paired securities.

Other Alternatives

There are also numerous other strategies that have proven to be effective in obtaining capital appreciation through all types of markets. Sector rotation and macro-hedging are two strategies investors often look to for all weather returns. Both offer flexible investment strategies with the latitude to shift from different areas of the market rather than being constrained to a single sub-asset class.

Macro-hedging is another flexible strategy that combines the theories of both sector rotation and long/short investing. Macro hedging strategies will seek to be invested in market-driven sectors while also using long and short trades to take advantage of specific market catalysts.

The Bridgewater All Weather Strategy

Ray Dalio developed Bridgewater’s All Weather Strategy in the 1970s after observing market changes and potential return scenarios surrounding the political turmoil from Richard Nixon’s presidency.

Since the 1970s Bridgewater has been one of the most popularly referenced all weather strategies offering the potential to gain from all aspects of security price movements in the market.

Related terms:

Asset Allocation Fund

An asset allocation fund is a fund that provides investors with a diversified portfolio of investments across various asset classes.  read more

Balanced Fund

Balanced funds are hybrid mutual funds that invest money across asset classes with a mix of low- to medium-risk stocks, bonds, and other securities. read more

Flexible Fund

A flexible fund is a mutual fund or other pooled investment that has broad flexibility for making investment decisions and allocations. Flexible funds can be U.S. regulated or offshore funds. read more

Hedge Fund

A hedge fund is an actively managed investment pool whose managers may use risky or esoteric investment choices in search of outsized returns. read more

Inflation Trade

An inflation trade is an investing scheme or trading method that seeks to profit from rising price levels influenced by inflation. read more

Long-Short Equity

Long-short equity is an investing strategy of taking long positions in stocks that are expected to appreciate and short positions in stocks that are expected to decline. read more

Long/Short Fund

A long/short fund is a type of mutual fund that takes long and short positions in investments typically from a specific market segment.  read more

Macro-Hedge

A macro-hedge is an investment technique used to mitigate or eliminate downside systemic risk from a portfolio of assets. read more

Market Neutral Fund

A market-neutral fund is a fund that seeks a profit in upward or downward trending environments, often through the use of paired long and short positions. read more

Mutual Fund

A mutual fund is a type of investment vehicle consisting of a portfolio of stocks, bonds, or other securities, which is overseen by a professional money manager. read more