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Saturday Mar 21 2026 00:00
3 min
Goldman Sachs is signaling to investors the imperative to prepare for a potential downturn in equity markets, with a notable caveat: traditional bond holdings, long considered a portfolio's steadfast anchor, might not provide their usual mitigating effect this time around. This advisory comes amidst a market environment that began with a relatively elevated risk appetite. However, this sentiment has been eroded by a confluence of factors, including escalating oil prices, heightened geopolitical friction, and the transformative potential of artificial intelligence across various economic sectors.
Year-to-date in 2026, major stock indices such as the Dow Jones Industrial Average, the S&P 500, and the Nasdaq Composite have all experienced declines. This broad-based retreat underscores a growing apprehension among investors regarding the sustainability of economic growth and market stability. Christian Mueller-Glissmann, Head of Asset Allocation Research at Goldman Sachs, highlighted in a recent report that these selling pressures could intensify. He stated, "While geopolitical shocks and their market implications are difficult to time precisely, we believe that equities have not priced in sufficient risk premium for more persistent shocks – our economists have already reflected a deterioration of the situation based on current volatility."
Historically, bonds have served as a cornerstone of investment portfolios, offering a degree of stability during periods of equity market turbulence. However, Mueller-Glissmann suggests that this buffering capacity may be significantly diminished in the current climate. Consequently, he warns that "the risk of larger drawdowns in the traditional 60/40 stock/bond portfolio has increased." This observation serves as a critical alert for investors heavily reliant on this classic asset allocation strategy.
In response to these projections, Goldman Sachs has adjusted its asset allocation recommendations. For the upcoming three-month period, the firm advocates for a more defensive stance, recommending an overweight in cash, an underweight in credit, and neutral positions in equities, bonds, and commodities. However, the outlook becomes more constructive over a medium-term horizon. For its six-month allocation plans, Goldman Sachs has increased its risk exposure, shifting to an overweight in equities and moving cash positions back to neutral.
Mueller-Glissmann points out that Goldman Sachs' long-term global portfolio benchmark, encompassing global equities, bonds, and gold, has seen a decline of approximately 4% since the onset of the Iran conflict. While characterizing this as "a rather small drawdown in a long-term context," he emphasizes the need for investors to consider strategies for risk mitigation. He notes that "the risk of persistent large losses in a 60/40 portfolio remains limited," but "investors should consider hedging against persistent stagflation risks by fortifying their multi-asset portfolios."
He suggests that investors can "consider combining high-quality trades in equities/credit/FX, alternative asset allocations, dynamic risk allocation, and overlay strategies on equities and across asset classes."
Furthermore, he highlights that strategies focusing on defensive, high-quality equities, Commodity Trading Advisors (CTAs), gold, and U.S. Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities (TIPS), coupled with options strategies like S&P 500 put spreads, have historically enhanced performance compared to the 60/40 portfolio on a risk-neutral basis since the year's inception. He concludes, "We continue to favor these strategies to control drawdown risk in a 60/40 portfolio as we move into the second quarter."
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