Larry Swedroe Eliminate Fat Tails Portfolio: Overview
1. Background and Philosophy
The Larry Swedroe Eliminate Fat Tails Portfolio is designed by Larry Swedroe, a renowned financial author, researcher, and principal at Buckingham Strategic Wealth. Swedroe is a proponent of evidence-based investing, emphasizing low-cost, passive strategies that minimize risk and maximize long-term returns. This portfolio reflects his focus on reducing tail risk (extreme market downturns) by combining equities with high-quality bonds and inflation-protected securities.
2. Asset Allocation Analysis
The portfolio is structured as follows:
- 15% EEM (iShares MSCI Emerging Markets ETF): Provides exposure to emerging market equities, offering growth potential but higher volatility.
- 15% IJR (iShares Core S&P Small-Cap ETF): Focuses on U.S. small-cap stocks, which historically outperform large caps over long periods but are riskier.
- 35% BIL (SPDR Bloomberg 1-3 Month T-Bill ETF): Allocates to ultra-short-term Treasury bills, providing liquidity and stability.
- 35% TIP (iShares TIPS Bond ETF): Invests in Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities (TIPS), hedging against inflation.
Diversification and Risk
The portfolio is highly diversified across equities (U.S. small caps and emerging markets) and bonds (short-term Treasuries and TIPS). However, its risk level is moderate to high due to the significant equity exposure (30%) and the volatility of small-cap and emerging market stocks. The bond allocation (70%) mitigates some risk but leans toward shorter durations, which may underperform in falling rate environments.
Pros and Cons
Pros:
- Inflation protection via TIPS.
- Low correlation between asset classes reduces tail risk.
- Low-cost ETFs align with passive investing principles.
Cons:
- Limited growth potential due to heavy bond allocation.
- Emerging market and small-cap risks can lead to volatility.
- No exposure to large-cap U.S. or international developed markets, which may limit diversification.
3. Practical Application in Retirement Accounts
For 401(k) Accounts:
Investors should:
- Identify comparable funds in their 401(k) plan:
- If a specific holding is unavailable, allocate to the closest broader asset class (e.g., substitute missing TIPS with a total bond market fund).
- Since commodities are rare in 401(k)s, any such allocation should be redirected to stocks or bonds.
For IRA Accounts:
Investors can directly purchase the ETFs listed in the portfolio, as IRAs offer greater flexibility. Rebalance annually to maintain the target allocations.