Adding Diversification with Trend Strategies

Here we consider an area that is less explored: the ability to implement systematic strategies like trend following within an overlay program. We see a natural opportunity for integrating overlay and trend strategies, given that both have similar architecture as predominantly rules-based derivatives strategies.

Overlay strategies have long offered institutional investors flexibility to customize portfolios, with the potential to help them achieve policy objectives more efficiently. Trend-following strategies provide investors with exposure to a unique behavioral risk premium,1 which may be desirable as a diversifying exposure in some asset allocations.

Understanding trend strategies

Trend strategies employ a systematic approach to capture the trend risk premia, typically across a broad array of asset classes such as equities, fixed income, commodities and currencies. At a high level, trend portfolios are built to exploit a behavioral bias whereby investors tend to buy what is going up and sell what is going down—that is, following the trend. Academic research has shown that historically, these strategies have tended to offer an uncorrelated positive excess return in the long run, while also providing a natural offset to equity drawdowns during risk-off periods.2

With a trend strategy approach, signals are formed based on a series of trailing returns to determine the direction and magnitude of the prevailing trend. These signals are then converted to a position for each asset based on its corresponding trend signal. Volatility and liquidity-based parameters may also be used to further manage portfolio risk.

Traditionally, trend-following managers can be added to a portfolio in a diversifying asset class or categorized within the hedge fund asset class. Often these asset classes have been associated with a lower degree of liquidity. However, trend strategies are typically built using liquid instruments such as exchanged-traded futures contracts—the same type of securities often used in traditional overlay programs.

By combining these two programs, investors may be able to gain the benefits of trend, delivered through a more liquid vehicle.