Commodity and CTA Turmoil

On the back of the US banking crisis which created a rapid shift in fixed income markets, the benchmark CTA indexes (BTOP50 and SG CTA) dropped 5 to 6.5% and experienced 7 to 9% peak to trough drawdowns. Some of the most popular CTA ETFs, typically with more concentrated positioning, were down twice as much from peak to trough. Auspice Diversified Trust, our flagship CTA fund, delivered a slight positive result in March, up 0.34%. Read More.

India Part Two – The Surge in Indian Capex and Infrastructure Spending

In January one chart in particular grabbed our attention, and we can’t understate its significance. The surge in Indian capex and planned infrastructure spending – on the back of the noted decade of underinvestment in the resource sector, may supersede the green transition as the biggest driver of a commodity supercycle. After a four-year period of flat to moderate capex growth, India is set to double its 2023 capex from 2020 levels. Read more.

India: The Emerging Demand Shock to Further Fuel the Commodity Supercycle

Along with the structural set-up we have previously described, we believe there is a substantial additional important factor, one that could dwarf all the others, that our recent research has uncovered. India may create a new emerging demand shock that we believe is already well underway. While China has the world's largest population at 1.426 billion, India at 1.417 billion is set to claim this title in 2023. India is already the fastest-growing economy in the world, having clocked 5.5% average gross domestic product growth over the past decade. But the growing middle class is the key. Read more.

What Are You Invested In? Why?

This month’s blog is brief. From the largest pensions to the most traditional bank platforms, investors are increasingly embracing alternative investments. We believe two reasons often come to the forefront: Diversification and Potential Returns Enhancement. If Diversification and returns enhancement indeed are the motivations to embrace alternatives, we may recommend investors think hard about what they're invested in, how much, and why. Read More.

Commodity Allocation vs Trading

As the Auspice Broad Commodity Index (underlying strategy to NYSE “COM” and TSX “CCOM” ETFs) went to a 100% cash position in October we performed some analysis. To some, buying a “commodity” ETF that is currently 100% cash seems counterintuitive. Historically this has only occurred three times since 2000. In September 2014 this occurred and there was significant outperformance vs long only commodity benchmarks (2-year 43.78% cumulative outperformance ABCERI vs S&P GSCI ER). In September 2008 and March 2020, the performance following was amongst the strongest performing periods. Read more.

60/40 Versus Five Top Pensions and Endowments

As we know, there are many options to diversify beyond stocks and bonds – something more capable, larger institutional investors have long embraced. With Quantitative Easing (QE) over and inflation sinking it, most investors are re-evaluating portfolios if not already done.

Some pensions like Ontario Teachers’ (OTPP) and Hawaii (HIERS) are ahead of the game and have announced exceptional results, delivering 1.2% and -1.7% in the first half performance, far superior to the traditional 60/40 portfolio result of -16.3%.

What are the pensions and endowments doing exactly? How are they performing? This month we look at five of the best. Read More.

Return Stacking – What, Why, Where, and How

We’ve seen several articles about “return stacking” over the past couple years - an approach to alternative investing long embraced by institutional investors that’s increasingly available to retail investors.

Indeed, at Auspice we have long offered (and advocated) for this approach with institutional investors, and in 2020 we made this strategy available to all investors through the Auspice One Fund.

What exactly is return stacking, why should you consider it, where does it fit within a portfolio, and how has it performed in the recent environment? This month’s blog provides an overview. Read More.

Risk Management is Key

If you have chatted to us or read any of our material over the last two years you understand we have been very bullish on commodities. Across the board, from unprecedented fundamental supply shortages to long-term technical indicators – we firmly believe we are in the early innings of a commodity supercycle (see May and March blogs for more). You simply cannot fix the supply issues overnight and raising rates does not change that.

That said, where there are significant rewards – the benchmark GSCI TR has now outperformed global equities since 1970 (see Appendix A) – there is also significant risk. Read more.

The End of an Era?

For retail investors in particular it has been a tremendous, unprecedented period of returns. Not only has the 60/40 portfolio thrived, but so too has real estate. If we look at various regimes, or themes that characterized 3-5 year periods, the current inflationary regime that began in 2020 marks the first departure from consistent stock/bonds/real estate returns since the Global Financial Crisis (GFC). Read More.

Commodity Supercycle - Second Inning

As depicted in Chart 2, from 1970 to 2007 the benchmark GSCI Commodity Index outperformed both the SP500 and MSCI World. With equities valuations at historical highs and commodity supply at record lows (see last month’s blog) we believe commodity outperformance vs equities will be even more significant this decade, maybe even a generational opportunity, eclipsing the outperformance experienced 1970 – 2010. Read More.

Ukraine – Commodity Importance, Backdrop, and Investment Implications.

February was volatile and any sanctions or coordinated responses may pose long term market ramifications. However, the Russian invasion of Ukraine mostly accentuated underlying fundamental themes already in motion:

  1. We’re in a structural commodity deficit that may affect markets broadly for years.

  2. Gains in commodities versus weakness in equities suggests cyclical rotation is underway.

Read More.

Bitcoin as an Inflation Hedge

April 2021 was the first time in the last decade inflation (US CPI) came in significantly above the 1-3% “normal” rate we became accustomed to aligning with the FED 2% target (see Chart 1 below). Inflation is currently at its highest levels since the 1980’s, CPI YoY recently reported at 7%. Since the April 2021 inflation surge, the most inflationary period of the last decade, Bitcoin is down 34.8%.

Read More.

Using leverage to reduce risk

In November investors learned of some of the biggest macro blow-ups in years. Rokos, Alphadyne, Element, Odey and some of the largest macro hedge funds have suffered 15-50%+ losses YTD with many double-digit losses in June and October (see references for more). Contrast this to Auspice Diversified: in 15+ years, in which there’s been multiple corrections and crisis, we’ve never exceeded a 26% drawdown (and are up over 11% in 2021).

Read more.

Commodity Futures and ESG

To date there has been little discussion about commodity futures within ESG frameworks - neither the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) nor the UN Principles for Responsible Investment (UNPRI) provides comprehensive guidance on commodity futures. We have researched this and will be sharing a comprehensive white paper “Commodity Investing in the Age of ESG and Inflation”. This month’s blog summarizes one of the white paper’s core considerations, that futures offer exposure to commodities with zero environmental impact.

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Equal Versus Fair

I often find analogies applicable in investing from other parts of life. Many come from general business and entrepreneurship, some come from life lessons. Some are well known and may even seem cliché, and some are more esoteric, the kind you learn the hard way.

A classic quote is that "Fair isn't everyone getting the same thing, fair is everyone getting what they need in order to be successful". In some ways I agree, in some ways I don't, but in the case of being successful in life and business, it is important to recognize people all bring different talents, experiences and even potentials. If we treat everyone equal, where everyone gets the same, it is a recipe for mediocrity, or even failure as depicted in the picture.

Read More.

Institutional Investors Adding Commodities - Big Time

"Ontario Teachers' Pension Plan looks at commodities for hedge against inflation. Teachers' net investments in commodities accounted for 12 per cent of the asset mix in the first half of the year, up from eight per cent at the end of 2020".

According to one database there are currently over 40 active commodity searches with institutional investors. A separate study of over 150 European institutional investors and wealth managers with a combined AUM of $USD 293bn found that “Over two thirds of institutional investors (67 per cent) expect the level of allocation into commodities to increase during 2021 and a further 32 per cent expect it to stay the same”.

Read more.