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MARKET RECAP

After a very difficult first half of the year, equity markets rebounded in July and August on investor hopes of an easing in inflation and a Fed pivot or pause. The reprieve was short-lived, however, as stocks tumbled to fresh lows in late September amid further aggressive central bank rate hikes and statements of further tightening to come.

Global stocks (MSCI ACWI Index) fell 6.82% for the quarter and are down 25.63% for the year. The S&P 500 dropped 4.88% for the quarter and is down 23.87% for the year. Developed international markets (MSCI EAFE Index) fell 9.36% for the quarter and 27.09% YTD. Emerging Market stocks (MSCI Emerging Markets Index) dropped 11.57% for the quarter and were down 27.16% YTD.

Foreign stock market returns for U.S. dollar-based investors were worsened by the sharp appreciation of the dollar. The U.S. Dollar Index was up 7.1% for the quarter and a stunning 17.3% on the year, hitting a 20-year high. These dollar gains translate into roughly comparable losses for U.S. dollar-based investors investing in international equity markets.

Core investment-grade bonds didn’t avoid the Q3 losses. The 10-year Treasury yield hit a decade high of 3.97%, causing the Bloomberg U.S. Aggregate Bond Index to drop 4.75%. This puts the “safe-haven” index down 14.61% for the year to date.

PORTFOLIO UPDATE

It was a challenging quarter for traditional stock and bond investments. While absolute performance was disappointing, we were able to soften the blow somewhat with investments in “non-traditional” asset classes such as flexible bonds, long-short funds, and managed futures strategies. We seek to balance our risk and return objectives by creating diversified portfolios, and many of these “non-traditional” investments have been bright spots in this tough year. The previously mentioned investments were funded from our core bond exposure, outperforming the aggregate bond benchmark in the quarter.

INVESTMENT OUTLOOK & PORTFOLIO POSITIONING

It was a challenging quarter for traditional stock and bond investments. While absolute performance was disappointing, we were able to soften the blow somewhat with investments in “non-traditional” asset classes such as flexible bonds, long-short funds, and managed futures strategies. We seek to balance our risk and return objectives by creating diversified portfolios, and many of these “non-traditional” investments have been bright spots in this tough year. The previously mentioned investments were funded from our core bond exposure, outperforming the aggregate bond benchmark in the quarter.

Be sure to read the other articles featured in our October 2022 newsletter: