Preserve and Build Wealth Through Uncertainty.
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Shifting interest rates, volatile markets and rising geopolitical risks have made one thing clear: successful wealth management today requires a dual focus on protection and growth. Striking the right balance between growing your assets and preserving capital demands discipline in portfolio design. Done well, it can help your wealth withstand market swings and protect purchasing power against inflation over time.
Many investors think “balance” simply means diversification. But true balance goes deeper. It’s about understanding the role each investment plays—how it contributes to growth, how it protects against loss, and whether the overall portfolio can endure periods of stress.
There’s no universal solution. At different stages of life, priorities shift. Some investors aim for maximum growth, while others value security above all else. The critical questions to ask yourself include:
Long-term research from the US, spanning almost 100 years, shows that portfolios recover more quickly from drawdowns when growth assets are paired with genuine diversifiers—investments that behave differently from shares, along with defensive assets designed to protect capital.
Low-correlated investments, for example, don’t move in tandem with equities, helping to smooth overall portfolio volatility. Their relationship with shares may be weak or even negative. Common examples include government bonds, gold, certain hedge fund strategies and commodities.
Defensive assets, meanwhile, are chosen for resilience. They are expected to hold their value—or even perform well—during market stress. Cash, high-quality bonds, infrastructure assets and defensive sectors like healthcare and utilities all fall into this category.
Growth is typically driven by equities (listed and private), venture capital, real assets and exposure to long-term structural themes such as healthcare innovation, energy transition or artificial intelligence.
The trade-off is volatility. Sharp market declines can test even experienced investors, sometimes triggering emotional decisions at precisely the wrong time.
Defensive equities can provide an important counterweight. These are companies with dependable earnings and dividends, regardless of whether the economy is expanding or contracting. Because they provide essentials—such as power, food and medical services—they tend to generate steady cash flow and often have pricing power to offset rising costs without losing customers.
Traditionally, portfolio defence starts with bonds and cash. But many investors believe that reliance on these alone is no longer sufficient.
The past five years have diminished bonds’ reputation as the ultimate stabiliser. Ultra-low rates during the COVID period were followed by aggressive rate hikes from mid‑2022, led by the RBA and the US Federal Reserve. In that reset, both bonds and equities fell together.
Today, however, bond investors are enjoying something far more appealing. Yields are materially higher than pandemic lows, offering what many describe as a rare sweet spot.
Higher yields mean bonds can now deliver meaningful income. Even if prices fluctuate in the short term, interest payments can help cushion returns. And if rates eventually fall, investors benefit from capital gains on top of locked-in income.
With many economists believing the tightening cycle is near its end, bonds once again offer the potential combination of income, stability and upside.
Other defensive techniques include bond laddering—investing in bonds that mature at staggered intervals over several years. This structure releases capital regularly and can help manage interest rate risk.
Real assets, such as property, infrastructure, commodities, natural resources and equipment, may offer protection against inflation. As living costs rise, the value and income generated by physical assets often increase as well.
Investors may also consider floating-rate investments or inflation-linked bonds. Floating-rate securities adjust interest payments as rates move, while inflation-linked bonds—known as Treasury Indexed Bonds (TIBs) in Australia or TIPS in the US—increase both principal and interest when inflation rises.
TIBs provide additional safety through a built-in deflation floor, ensuring your original capital is protected even if prices fall.
For globally invested portfolios, currency exposure deserves deliberate attention—not accidental outcomes.
Historically, the Australian dollar tends to weaken during global market stress. In those periods, unhedged international assets can help offset portfolio losses.
However, leaving all currency exposure unhedged can also amplify volatility. A partial hedging approach—such as hedging some developed-market bond holdings—may strike a better balance between stability and opportunity.
Finally, true protection includes liquidity planning. Whether investing through trusts, SMSFs or companies, it’s prudent to maintain sufficient cash or short-term assets to cover 12 to 24 months of expected needs, including tax obligations, capital calls and distributions.
That flexibility is protection you can rely on.
Please contact us if you’d like to review whether your portfolio is appropriately positioned for both growth and resilience.
i It Was the Worst of Times: Diversification During a Century of Drawdowns
ii A terrific environment for bonds | Vanguard Australia FAS
iii Drivers of the Australian Dollar Exchange Rate | Explainer | Education | RBA
Important Information:
Primary Wealth Management Pty Ltd (ABN 71 694 757 885) is a Corporate Authorised Representative (Representative No. 001319586) of Guidance Advisers Pty Ltd (ABN 65 653 468 832, AFSL 540341).
Any financial product advice provided in this article is general advice only, meaning it has been prepared without taking into account your personal objectives, financial situation, or needs. Before acting on any advice on this website, you should consider the appropriateness of the advice, having regard to your own objectives, financial situation, and needs. If the advice relates to the acquisition, or possible acquisition, of a particular financial product, you should obtain a copy of, and consider, the Product Disclosure Statement (PDS) for that product before making any decision
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