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Eelco Ubbels's avatar

This is not an article about market timing, but rather explains why both tactical shifts and expected long-term returns must start with the same question: what is the current opportunity cost of capital?

That is the real bridge between corporate finance and asset allocation in this article by Aswath Damodaran. Risk is not treated as a number to be minimised, nor as volatility to be optimised, but as a trade-off between danger and opportunity. That approach is important. It explains why asset allocation cannot be reduced to categories such as 'low risk versus high risk' .

For tactical allocators, this is a reminder that timing has less to do with predicting volatility and more to do with understanding which risks are currently priced in and which are not. When hurdle rates rise or fall, the relative attractiveness of duration, cyclicality and cash flow timing shifts, even if the underlying risk ranking of sectors hardly changes.

For long-term investors, the message is equally sobering. Expected returns are limited by hurdle rates. These are not free variables. Most assets fall within a surprisingly narrow range of required returns, which means that accuracy in forecasts is often less important than consistency in assumptions.

In our own work on asset allocation at Asset Allocation Report, we therefore monitor not only positioning, but also the assumptions for risk-free returns and hurdle rates that underlie both tactical shifts and expected long-term returns.

Daniel's Deep Dive's avatar

Thank you, Professor.

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