“Crisis Alpha” is not a guaranteed hedge but the result of a managed futures strategy successfully capturing extreme macroeconomic shifts. The strategy is fundamentally about following major macro themes, with a crisis simply being one of the most intense themes it can follow.
Unlike typical investors who chase performance, sophisticated institutions often rebalance into managed futures when the strategy is in a drawdown. They take profits after strong years (like 2022) and re-allocate capital during weak periods to maintain strategic exposure.
Contrary to expectations, drawdowns in managed futures frequently occur when equity markets are performing well. The strategy's recovery periods, however, often coincide with equity market turbulence, highlighting its counter-cyclical nature and making it behaviorally difficult to hold.
Combining managed futures with equities in a single product makes the strategy easier for investors to hold behaviorally. However, this “smoother ride” comes at a cost: it dilutes the powerful, anti-correlated impact that a pure-play managed futures strategy can have during a significant market downturn.
Simple replication of managed futures indices is slow and has high tracking error. A superior “informed replication” approach combines backward-looking index data with forward-looking trend system priors and active risk management, resulting in a more robust beta-like exposure.
Investors hesitant to buy assets like gold near all-time highs can use trend following for exposure. The strategy systematically enters prevailing trends and, crucially, provides a built-in, non-emotional exit signal when the trend reverses, mitigating timing risk.
The most profitable periods for trend following occur when market trends extend far beyond what seems rational or fundamentally justified. The strategy is designed to stay disciplined as prices move to levels few can imagine, long after others have exited.
