New Highs

Introduction

It has been a great year for equity investors. The S&P 500 index posted a 31% annual return, the Dow 25%, and the NASDAQ a spectacular 39%. More than $6T of equity paper wealth was created for domestic investors this year alone. Unlike some recent years, global equity investors were not left out of the rally; the MSCI ACWI IMI rose a highly respectable 26% this year.

For a number of reasons, many Americans did not participate in this historic rally. For one thing, roughly half of Americans do not own stocks. For those who do, a volatile third quarter, an inverted yield curve, global fears of a possible recession, uncertainty in Fed policy, political dysfunction in Washington, and various technical indicators encouraged many to limit their participation in the market while motivating others to use various defensive low return investment strategies. For the unsophisticated, it was as simple as being spooked by a too-good-to-be true market and what-goes-up-must-come-down sentiment.

Investing is often confused with trading. Good long-term investing is not for the faint of heart. Longer-term political, economic, and capital market trends, rather than short-term portfolio positioning requiring the need for an accurate forecast, is often the most reliable route for investors. Important secular trends include the continuing democratization of stock market investing, with zero online trading fees and fractional shares. The combination of a robust U.S. economy, a thoughtful Federal Reserve, strong consumer sentiment, and a possible first phase trade agreement with China were fundamental factors driving historic gains in U.S. and global indices.

New Frontier Performance

New Frontier’s standard portfolios are global multi-asset ETF investment strategies for six stock/bond ratios ranging from 20/80 to 100% equity. Portfolios are optimized, rebalanced, and traded based on New Frontier’s multi patented and proprietary investment technologies. Portfolio optimality is monitored on a daily basis by computing a unique “need-to-trade” estimate for all portfolios managed by the firm. Our process is focused not on changes in short-term sentiment but on long-term optimality at each point in time.

S&P Dow Jones computes portfolio performance of our optimized investment strategies in index form. Current performance and a more than fifteen-year track record is available on Bloomberg, Morningstar, Yahoo, on our website, smartphones, and in real-time on wearable devices such as the Apple Watch. Reported performance is that of our global strategic mandates in index form, which are net of ETF expense ratio costs but gross of management and advisory fees and trading costs. Consequently, New Frontier strategies can be compared directly to the performance of many standard passive indices.

As an example, New Frontier’s Global Equity index (NFGEI), consisting of twenty non-fixed income global ETFs, closely replicates the MSCI ACWI IMI index. Another example is New Frontier’s Global Balanced index (NFGBI) representing a 60/40 stock/bond ratio portfolio consisting of roughly twenty-seven global ETFs. Such an index may serve as an appropriate long-term performance benchmark for many institutions and individual investors in well-defined investment programs. For the year, the NFGBI index was up 20.9%. In contrast, a 60/40 benchmark of the MSCI ACWI IMI index and FTSE 3-month T-bill or Barclays Agg was up 16.7% and 19.3% respectively.