On August 11, 1999, a five-year
study was published in the Wall
Street Journal, concerning the major
wire-houses with the best
performance records in asset
allocation. The study included
Merrill Lynch, Salomon Brothers,
Goldman Sachs, Dean Witter, Paine
Webber, and other notable brokerage
houses. The firm with the best asset
allocation performance records was
Goldman Sachs. Why? They were the
only stock firm to include futures
in their asset allocation.
Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley recommend up to
15% of an investment portfolio into managed
futures.
According to Morningstar, in a single month,
November 2000, the average diversified and
technology funds lost 15.6% and 26%,
respectively. The Managed Account Report Trading
Advisor Qualified Universe Index was up 5.6%.
Prof. John K. Linter of Harvard University
presented a landmark paper, "The Potential Role
of Managed Commodity-Financial Futures Accounts
(and/or Funds) in Portfolios of Stocks and
Bonds," to the Financial Analysts Federation.
The research paper stated that "the improvements
from holding an efficiently-selected portfolio
of managed accounts or funds are so large, and
the correlation between returns on the futures
portfolios and those on the stock and bond
portfolios are so low (sometimes even negative),
that the return/risk tradeoffs provided by
augmented portfolios…clearly dominate the
tradeoffs available from portfolio of stocks
alone or from a portfolios of stocks and bonds."

The ability of futures to enhance the returns of
traditional investments has been documented in a
study conducted by Goldman Sachs. Covering a
25-year period, the study concluded that by
"allocating only 10% of a securities portfolio
to commodities, investors can vastly improve
their performance." Goldman Sachs' conclusion,
concerning the value of commodities, was
supported by another study published by the
Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME), one of the
world's pre-eminent futures exchanges. According
to the CME study, "Portfolios with as much as
20% of assets in managed futures yield up to 50%
more than a portfolio of stocks and bonds
alone."
Next Article:
Managed Futures Investment
Opportunities