The 60/40 Portfolio Review and ETF Pie for M1 Finance (2024)

Financially reviewed by Patrick Flood, CFA.

The 60/40 Portfolio has long been the go-to cornerstone for medium-risk investing for all ages. Recent speculation suggests it might be “dead.” Here we’ll investigate that proposition and take a look at the portfolio's components, historical performance, and the best ETF’s to use in its implementation.

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Contents

What is the 60/40 Portfolio?

The 60/40 Portfolio has served as a cornerstone asset allocation of long-term investing for decades, originally borne of the simple desire for one's investments to survive downtowns, something that a 100% stocks portfolio may not always do without a sufficiently long investing horizon. Peter Bernstein considered the 60/40 portfolio to be the “center of gravity” between risk and return.

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As the name implies, the 60/40 Portfolio is simply a portfolio comprised of 60% stocks and 40% bonds. The premise is that the uncorrelation of bonds to stocks increases diversification, reduces volatility, and helps protect against drawdowns and black swan events.

The specific allocation has historically been a moderate balance of stock-driven returns and bond-driven risk reduction. Interestingly, the rationale behind the specific 60/40 allocation was originally largely based simply on tradition and intuition, which was later affirmed by modern portfolio theory. As an aside, there's a fund called NTSX that takes this idea and applies 1.5x leverage to it for 90/60 exposure.

The 60/40 portfolio is as follows:

  • 60% Stocks
  • 40% Bonds
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Let's look at specific asset choices.

Stocks

For the 60% stocks position, we have several choices. You could choose to use the S&P 500 index, the total U.S. stock market, the total world stock market, the Russell 1000 index, etc. To broadly diversify across U.S. stocks, I’m suggesting the use of a total U.S. stock market fund, to get some exposure to small- and mid-cap stocks, which have outperformed large-cap stocks historically due to the Size factor premium. I'll explore a globally-diversified option below later in this post.

Bonds

For bonds, the obvious and popular choice is a total bond market fund, but since we knowtreasury bonds are superior to corporate bonds, I’m suggesting intermediate treasury bonds, which should roughly match the average duration of the total U.S. treasury bond market.

Long-term bonds are likely too volatile – and too susceptible to interest rate risk – for older investors, and short-term bonds are too conservative for young investors at a 40% allocation, so intermediate-term bonds offer a happy medium that is suitable for most investors.

For that reason, my blanket recommendation for a one-fund, one-size-fits-most bond choice would be intermediate-term treasury bonds, which should roughly match the average maturity of the total treasury bond market. I have to speak to the “average investor” in this post.

I also obviously acknowledge that, again, an equity-heavy portfolio will likely outperform a 60/40 portfolio over the long-term in terms of pure return. I wouldn't suggest that young investors take up a significant allocation to bonds from the start unless they consciously realize they have a low tolerance for risk and volatility. We'll explore this more below.

Recall too that Warren Buffett himself plans to put his wife's estate in a 90/10 portfolio with 10% in short-term treasury bonds, and recent research shows a historically safe withdrawal rate not far off from that of a 60/40 portfolio. I delved into that a little in this blog post about the Warren Buffet Portfolio.

Is the 60/40 Portfolio Dead? Probably Not

Pundits have been reciting for years that the “60/40 portfolio is dead,” positing that investors should embrace a higher allocation to equities going forward. I don't necessarily disagree with that idea per se, as stocks tend to outperform bonds, but I also don't think their hyperbolic opinion of the 60/40 being “dead” is accurate.

Part of their assumption is also that a young, new investor will be taking up a 60/40 asset allocation. I would argue that's likely not the case. Assuming a retirement age of 60, I use [age-20] as a general rule of thumb for bond allocation. One can obviously titrate that up or down based on personal risk tolerance.

This means a 20-year-old would be 100% equities, and a 30-year-old would have 10% allocated to bonds. Even then, they can afford to use longer-duration bonds like long-term treasuries, at least for a while, that should allow for higher returns over the long-term.

Moreover, while the somewhat reliable historical relationship between stocks and bonds may indeed be decreasing, that doesn't mean it's “dead.” Bonds still offer the lowest correlation – usually negative – to stocks of any asset.

Bond Behavior with Low, Zero, Negative, or Rising Interest Rates

At the time of writing, many people also complain of bonds' “historically low yield,” and parrot that “interest rates will begin rising” from their current “record lows,” which they say will hurt bonds. People have also been claiming that “interest rates can only go up” every year for the past decade, while they haven't. Moreover, zero and negative rates are not out of the question. I would submit that the complaintive chatter over low yield and the potential for rising rates is quite literally short-term noise.

Arguably more importantly, there's no reason to expect interest rates to rise just because they are low. They have gradually declined for the last 700 years without reversion to the mean.

I acknowledge that post-Volcker monetary policy, resulting in falling interest rates, has driven the particularly stellar returns of the bond bull market since 1982, but I also think the Fed and U.S. monetary policy are fundamentally different since the Volcker era, likely allowing us to avoid hyperinflationary environments like the late 1970's going forward.

I also concede that interest rate risk is real, but bonds are unfairly maligned. Intuitively, bonds do appear more attractive at higher interest rates, but they shouldn't be feared at low/zero/negative/rising rates. Let's explore why.

Capital Appreciation – Bonds Have Returns Too

Bond naysayers who complain of low yields and rising rates seem to forget the simple fact that bonds have returns too, and that in a long-term lazy portfolio, we're more interested in their uncorrelation to stocks and how that reduces the portfolio's overall volatility, regardless of the bond duration used, not holding bonds in isolation.

A bond is essentially just a loan that you provide and for which you receive periodic interest payments over time until the bond reaches “maturity.” A simplistic explanation of bonds' change in value is this: When market interest rates fall, capital appreciation occurs because your bond's higher coupon payment is now worth more. Conversely, when market interest rates rise, your bond's lower coupon payment is now worth less.

Bonds with an effective duration of 5 years, for example, are expected to change in value by 5% for every 1% change in the market interest rate. As such, long-term bonds (longer durations) are more volatile – and more affected by interest rate changes – than short-term bonds:

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Bond Convexity

A subtle and complex yet beautiful concept illustrates why we shouldn't avoid bonds; it's called bond convexity. Tyler over at PortfolioCharts.com does a great job of explaining this concept comprehensively here for those who are interested. I'll attempt to summarize it below.

The aforementioned exemplary inverse relationship of bond price sensitivity to market interest rates is not one of linearity. That relationship is actually a curve. The shape of this curve is referred to as convexity. The effect of this convexity is greater as bond maturity increases:

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The above image is simply an illustration of the effect of bond duration and interest rate changes on bonds' capital appreciation. As you can see, even in a negative rate environment, a 1% drop in interest rate results in significant gains for a 30-year bond, while the incremental gains for 5-year bonds are relatively flat.

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Incorporating coupon payments, lower-interest-rate long-term bonds experience greater gains than high-interest-rate long-term bonds.

Now let's look at the potential downside with rising rates:

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As we would expect, a bond's interest payment becomes more important at higher interest rates, and capital appreciation becomes more important at low interest rates.

The important takeaway is that bond risk and returns are asymmetrical, and that asymmetry favors the upside.

This again supports our use of intermediate-term bonds: long-term bonds capture significant returns when interest rates decline, while short-term bonds are safe in a rising rate environment.

60/40 Portfolio Historical Performance

I decided to run a backtest to look at the historical performance of the 60/40 portfolio against a 70/30, 80/20, and the S&P 500 index. Based on my comments about U.S. monetary policy, I started the backtest below in 1982, letting it run through March 2020 to see the recent major drawdown:

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As we might expect, the 60/40 portfolio delivered the greatest risk-adjusted return (Sharpe) and had the lowest volatility and smallest drawdown. But let's explore this comparison in a little more detail.

60/40 vs. 70/30 vs. 80/20 – Choosing an Asset Allocation

This is the classic stocks/bonds asset allocation question, to which there's no simple answer. Recall that past results do not indicate future performance. That said, it's usually the best data we have to act on. Specifically though, we're interested in how different assets interact relative to each other in order to optimize the portfolio as a whole, which is why one aims to diversify their portfolio in the first place. Historical data on that aspect is a little more reliable than performance chasing.

On average, stocks and bonds have historically had a fairly reliable uncorrelation, which is why they're the first diversifier of choice, and is why portfolios like 60/40, 70/30, and 80/20 are household names. Thankfully, while past returns don't indicate future returns, past volatility is correlated with future volatility. A portfolio with any allocation to an uncorrelated asset – especially bonds – should invariably have lower volatility, and lower risk, than a portfolio of 100% stocks.

Risk Tolerance

As I said earlier, my general rule of thumb is to use your age minus 20 for your bond allocation, moving more into bonds as you near retirement. This can obviously differ based on one's personal risk tolerance.

Larry Swedroe suggests that choosing an asset allocation is investing based on one's “ability, willingness and need to take risk.” Ability refers to time horizon, need for liquidity, income, and flexibility. Willingness refers to the emotional and psychological factors; what allocation will allow you to sleep easy at night? I maintain that it is perfectly reasonable to adopt what is seen as a more “conservative” allocation such as 60/40 if it allows you to sleep better than a 100/0 portfolio, especially during market turmoil. Need refers to the investor's required rate of return to achieve their financial goals, usually a specific amount of money needed to retire. Once you hit that amount, you no longer have a need to assume additional risk.

Obviously, a young investor will likely naturally have more ability and willingness to take on additional risk, hence the popular mantra of “go 100% stocks for a while.” That's where my general suggestion of age minus 20 fits in, allowing you to slide to a more conservative allocation as time goes on. This is because accumulation is more important for the young investor and capital preservation becomes increasingly important as you near retirement. Using that suggestion, a retiree at age 60 has a stocks/bonds allocation of 60/40.

This is also why I say a one-size-fits-most allocation is 80/20, assuming an average age along that spectrum of 40 years old. Using my math, a 30-year-old investor would have 10% in bonds. That 10% isn't going to make or break the portfolio, but it may affect the overall portfolio's volatility – and the subsequent emotional impact of drawdowns – considerably.

William Bernstein suggests that one can evaluate their risk tolerance based on how they reacted to the Subprime Mortgage Crisis of 2008:

  • Sold: low risk tolerance
  • Held steady: moderate risk tolerance
  • Bought more: high risk tolerance
  • Bought more and hoped for further declines: very high risk tolerance

Vanguard has a questionnaire tool here to help you determine your personal risk tolerance to then inform your asset allocation, but while it may be a useful exercise, it's still only one piece of the risk tolerance puzzle and doesn't factor in things like current mood, current market sentiment, external influence etc. Be mindful of these things and try to be as objective as possible. The behavioral aspect of investing is very real and can have significant consequences. Are you going to panic sell if your portfolio value drops by 37% like it did for an S&P 500 index investor in 2008 during the Global Financial Crisis? Assess your tolerance for risk carefully and choose an asset allocation that will allow you to “stay the course,” as Bogle said.

Also acknowledge and account for cognitive biases such as loss aversion, the principle that humans are generally more sensitive to losses than to gains, suggesting we do more to avoid losses than to acquire gains.

Vanguard also has a useful page showing historical returns and risk metrics for different asset allocations that may help your decision process. Keep in mind the same performance seen on that page may not carry into the future.

Bond Duration

Hopefully you're starting to see that risk tolerance and asset allocation are not simple topics.

Another piece of the puzzle when comparing 60/40 vs. 70/30 vs. 80/20, etc., is bond duration. Just as a young investor is likely able and willing to take on more risk with a lower bond allocation, so too are they able to utilize longer-term bonds that are more volatile.

Many shy away from long-term bonds due to their inherent high volatility without realizing that you precisely need that extra volatility to effectively counteract the downward movement of stocks, as stocks tend to be more volatile than even long-term bonds, especially if you have a low allocation to bonds. To illustrate this, let's look historically at a 60/40 portfolio that uses long-term bonds vs. one that uses intermediate-term bonds vs. one that uses short-term bonds from 1978 through 2019:

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Notice the higher general and risk-adjusted return (Sharpe) – and smaller max drawdown – for Portfolio 1 with long-term bonds, with only slightly more volatility than its intermediate-term and short-term counterparts. Here are the rolling returns over that time period:

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The key takeaway to remember here is we're not concerned how an asset like long-term bonds performs in isolation; we're interested in its contribution and interaction in the portfolio as a whole. Again, though it may seem counterintuitive, long-term bonds are able to reduce portfolio drawdowns and deliver higher risk-adjusted returns precisely because of their higher volatility. This is an instance where 2 wrongs do indeed make a right: 2 highly volatile assets produce the portfolio with the highest risk-adjusted return and smallest drawdowns. At least this has been true historically.

Does this mean your entire bond holding should be long-term bonds? Probably not. A general rule of thumb is to try to match bond duration to your investing horizon. We also don't know for sure that the stocks/bonds uncorrelation will persist. I usually say that a one-size-fits-most duration for a bond-heavy portfolio is intermediate-term treasury bonds. For the sake of simplicity and a one-size-fits-most approach in this post, that's the duration I've chosen for the 40% bond holding, which, like we looked at earlier with bond convexity, should be suitable for any interest rate environment.

Realize too though that you may very well have a longer retirement than you expect. Your investment portfolio doesn't simply cease at age 60. For that reason, I like the idea proposed on the Bogleheads forum of putting the “first 20%” of your bonds in long-term bonds, at least until retirement. This means a 90/10 portfolio and an 80/20 portfolio would have entirely long-term bonds. A 70/30 would have 20% long-term bonds and 10% intermediate-term bonds. And so on.

60/40 Portfolio Returns by Year

The chart below shows the returns by year for the 60/40 portfolio compared to asset classes and the S&P 500 index for the period 1970 through 2018:

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Here are the returns of a 60/40 portfolio in recent years. Far from “dead” if you ask me:

2019: +21%
2020: +16%

60/40 Portfolio ETF Pie for M1 Finance

M1 Financeis a great choice of broker to implement the 60/40 Portfolio because it makes regular rebalancing seamless and easy, has zero transaction fees, and incorporates dynamic rebalancing for new deposits. I wrote a comprehensive review of M1 Finance here.

Using entirely low-cost Vanguard funds, we can construct the60/40 Portfolio pielike this:

  • VTI – 60%
  • VGIT – 40%

You can add the 60/40 Portfolio pie to your portfolio on M1 Finance by clickingthis linkand then clicking “Invest in this pie.” Investors outside the U.S. can useeToro.

Taking the 60/40 Portfolio International

No one ever said the 60/40 portfolio can only contain two funds. On the equity side, you could choose to go 80/20 with U.S. and ex-U.S. stocks if you want to. To keep things simple here, though, we can simply replace VTI with VT, Vanguard's Total World Stock Market fund. That fund contains about 60% U.S. stocks at current global market weights.

Our global 60/40 portfolio then becomes:

  • 60% VT
  • 40% VGIT

You can add this global 60/40 Portfolio pie to your portfolio on M1 Finance by clickingthis linkand then clicking “Invest in this portfolio.”

Canadians can find the above ETFs on Questrade or Interactive Brokers. Investors outside North America can use eToro or possibly Interactive Brokers.

Are you nearing or in retirement? Use my link here to get a free holistic financial plan from fiduciary advisors at Retirable to manage your savings, spend smarter, and navigate key decisions.

Don't want to do all this investing stuff yourself or feel overwhelmed? Check out my flat-fee-only fiduciary friends over at Advisor.com.

What do you think of the 60/40 Portfolio? Let me know in the comments.

Disclosure:I am long VTI in my own portfolio.

Interested in more Lazy Portfolios? See the full list here.

Disclaimer: While I love diving into investing-related data and playing around with backtests, this is not financial advice, investing advice, or tax advice. The information on this website is for informational, educational, and entertainment purposes only. Investment products discussed (ETFs, mutual funds, etc.) are for illustrative purposes only. It is not a recommendation to buy, sell, or otherwise transact in any of the products mentioned. I always attempt to ensure the accuracy of information presented but that accuracy cannot be guaranteed. Do your own due diligence. I mention M1 Finance a lot around here. M1 does not provide investment advice, and this is not an offer or solicitation of an offer, or advice to buy or sell any security, and you are encouraged to consult your personal investment, legal, and tax advisors. All examples above are hypothetical, do not reflect any specific investments, are for informational purposes only, and should not be considered an offer to buy or sell any products. All investing involves risk, including the risk of losing the money you invest. Past performance does not guarantee future results. Opinions are my own and do not represent those of other parties mentioned. Read my lengthier disclaimer here.

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Are you nearing or in retirement? Use my link here to get a free holistic financial plan from fiduciary advisors at Retirable to manage your savings, spend smarter, and navigate key decisions.

Don't want to do all this investing stuff yourself or feel overwhelmed? Check out my flat-fee-only fiduciary friends over at Advisor.com.

The 60/40 Portfolio Review and ETF Pie for M1 Finance (12)

The 60/40 Portfolio Review and ETF Pie for M1 Finance (2024)
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