Macro-Hedge

Macro-Hedge

A macro-hedge is an investment technique used to mitigate or eliminate downside systemic risk from a portfolio of assets. Macro-hedging strategies are often considered alternative investment strategies since they fall outside the realm of traditional long-only portfolios. Using derivatives creates additional risk of capital loss for a portfolio because derivative techniques require the added cost of purchasing a product that is taking a position on an underlying asset. Macro-hedging requires the use of derivatives, which allows a portfolio manager to take inverse positions on targeted assets and asset categories that they believe will be significantly affected by a macro catalyst. In either case, macro-hedging requires substantial access to market trading platforms and the ability to utilize a variety of financial instruments in order to build sufficient market positions. Investors without broad market access to financial instruments used for macro-hedging strategies can turn to some of the industry’s retail offerings, commonly packaged in the form of exchange-traded funds (ETFs).

What Is a Macro-Hedge?

A macro-hedge is an investment technique used to mitigate or eliminate downside systemic risk from a portfolio of assets. Macro-hedging strategies typically involve using derivatives to take short positions on broad market catalysts that can negatively affect the performance of a portfolio or a specific underlying asset.

Macro-Hedge Explained

Macro-hedging requires the use of derivatives, which allows a portfolio manager to take inverse positions on targeted assets and asset categories that they believe will be significantly affected by a macro catalyst.

The macro in macro-hedge refers to risk mitigation around macroeconomic events. Therefore, macro-hedging generally requires significant foresight, extensive access to economic data and superior forecasting skills to project the expected reaction of markets and investment securities when trends occur. However, in some cases, macro-hedging positions may be easily foreseen by a series of events leading to a predetermined outcome.

In either case, macro-hedging requires substantial access to market trading platforms and the ability to utilize a variety of financial instruments in order to build sufficient market positions. Thus, macro-hedges are most often integrated by sophisticated investors and professional portfolio managers. Investors without broad market access to financial instruments used for macro-hedging strategies can turn to some of the industry’s retail offerings, commonly packaged in the form of exchange-traded funds (ETFs).

Macro-Hedging ETF Strategies

Inverse and ultra inverse ETF offerings have made macro-hedging easier for retail investors confident in their negative outlook for a particular sector or market segment. One recent example is Brexit, which caused short-term losses in many U.K. stocks and also caused a deflation of the British pound. Many investors foreseeing these losses took short positions in U.K. stocks and the British pound, which caused substantial market gains following the Brexit vote and subsequent events leading to the separation.

Other macroeconomic events that can drive macro-hedging strategies include a country’s gross domestic product expectations, inflation trends, currency movements and factors affecting commodity prices. ProShares and Direxion are two ETF providers that have developed a broad range of ETF products offered for macro-hedging. Inverse products protecting against a bearish outlook include the ProShares UltraShort FTSE Europe ETF, the ProShares UltraShort Yen ETF, and the Direxion Daily Gold Miners Index Bear 3X Shares.

Alternative Hedging Strategies

Macro-hedging strategies are often considered alternative investment strategies since they fall outside the realm of traditional long-only portfolios. Using derivatives creates additional risk of capital loss for a portfolio because derivative techniques require the added cost of purchasing a product that is taking a position on an underlying asset. Leverage is often used, which requires the investment to outperform its borrowing rate.

However, macro-hedging strategies can be successful when significant market movements occur. They can also be used to offset a portion of a portfolio that is likely to be affected by a macro projection. This involves taking targeted inverse bets on portions of a portfolio. It can also involve overweighting securities expected to outperform.

In November 2017, Bloomberg reported on the world’s best performing global macro hedge fund, Singapore's PruLev Global Macro Fund. The Fund reported a 47% gain by taking macro-hedge positions that benefited from former President Donald Trump’s political agenda in the U.S. as well as economic growth in China, Japan, Switzerland, and the Eurozone. Other leading macro-hedge fund managers in the U.S. followed closely, including Bridgewater Associates and Renaissance Technologies.

Institutional Macro-Hedging

Institutional funds also seek macro-hedge fund strategies to manage volatility and mitigate losses in public pension funds and corporate retirement plans. Asset managers such as BlackRock and JPMorgan are industry leaders in macro-hedging portfolio solutions for institutional clients.

Related terms:

Brexit (British Exit from the European Union)

Brexit refers to the U.K.'s withdrawal from the European Union after voting to do so in a June 2016 referendum. read more

Currency ETF

Currency ETFs are financial products built with the goal of providing investment exposure to forex currencies. read more

De-hedge

De-hedge refers to the process of taking off positions that were put in place as a hedge. read more

Derivative

A derivative is a securitized contract whose value is dependent upon one or more underlying assets. Its price is determined by fluctuations in that asset. read more

Downside Protection

Downside protection refers to the techniques an investor or fund manager uses to prevent a decrease in the value of the investment. read more

Exchange Traded Fund (ETF) and Overview

An exchange traded fund (ETF) is a basket of securities that tracks an underlying index. ETFs can contain investments such as stocks and bonds. read more

Global Macro Hedge Fund

A global macro hedge fund builds portfolios that seek to capitalize on the outcome of political or economic events or the market volatility that surrounds those events. read more

Hedging Transaction

A hedging transaction is a position that an investor enters to offset the risks related to another position they hold.  read more

Macroeconomics

Macroeconomics studies an overall economy or market system, its behavior, the factors that drive it, and how to improve its performance. read more

Micro-Hedge

A micro-hedge seeks to minimize the risk of just a single asset from a larger portfolio. read more