For decades, the 60/40 portfolio — allocating 60% to equities and 40% to fixed income — stood as the gold standard of wealth management.
Its appeal was rooted in a simple and elegant idea: When stocks decline, bonds typically rise, creating a natural hedge that allows investors to "buy and hold" their way to long-term growth.
However, for accredited investors — those with at least $1 million in investable assets — the financial landscape of 2026 has exposed the limitations of this static approach.
In a world shaped by rapid technological disruption, geopolitical shifts and persistently higher interest rates, the traditional 60/40 portfolio is no longer a reliable safety net.
In many cases, it has become a source of unintended risk.
To preserve and grow capital in this environment, the conversation must evolve from static risk management to tactical risk management.
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The failure of the static model
Static risk management is, by design, reactive. It depends heavily on historical correlations, assuming that past relationships between asset classes will continue into the future. Its primary mechanism is periodic rebalancing — adjusting holdings to maintain a fixed allocation like 60/40.
Recent inflationary cycles have highlighted a critical flaw in this approach. During periods of rising inflation, the traditional inverse relationship between stocks and bonds can break down. Instead of offsetting each other, both asset classes may decline simultaneously.
For investors with substantial portfolios, this creates a meaningful risk. A simultaneous 15% drop across both equities and fixed income can significantly erode purchasing power — and recovering from that kind of drawdown can take years.
Defining tactical risk management
Tactical risk management takes a proactive, regime-based approach. Rather than adhering to a static allocation, it dynamically adjusts portfolio exposures based on current economic conditions, market trends and volatility signals.
For accredited investors, this approach offers three key advantages:
1. Volatility budgeting
Instead of targeting a specific asset mix, tactical strategies aim for a defined level of portfolio volatility.
When market turbulence increases, cap exposure to higher-risk assets is reduced, with capital shifting into "dry powder," such as cash or short-term Treasuries.
This helps mitigate sequence of returns risk, which can be especially damaging near retirement or liquidity events.
2. Regime-based allocation
Today's market is characterized by rolling recessions and rapid sector rotations. A static 60/40 allocation may leave investors overexposed to declining sectors or underexposed to emerging opportunities.
Tactical management uses macroeconomic indicators to tilt portfolios toward areas of relative strength — such as energy, commodities, private credit or infrastructure — while reducing exposure to weakening trends.
3. Asymmetric preservation
Tactical strategies often incorporate elements of convexity — seeking to capture a meaningful portion of market upside while limiting downside exposure.
For high-net-worth investors, the objective isn't simply to outperform a benchmark, but to ensure that major market corrections result in more controlled portfolio drawdowns.
Feature | Static risk management (60/40) | Tactical risk management |
|---|---|---|
Philosophy | Market efficiency (passive) | Market regimes (active/adaptive) |
Primary tool | Calendar rebalancing | Volatility and trend signals |
Correlation | Assumes stocks/bonds diverge | Acknowledges correlation can shift |
Downside risk | Fully exposed to market beta | Seeks protection through "risk-off" pivots |
Best for | Early-stage accumulation | Capital preservation and alpha |
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The behavioral edge
One of the most overlooked advantages of tactical risk management is its psychological benefit. A static "buy, hold and hope" strategy may feel comfortable during bull markets, but it becomes increasingly difficult to maintain during prolonged downturns.
Many investors abandon their strategy at precisely the wrong moment — near market bottoms.
Tactical management introduces a structured, rules-based framework for decision-making. With predefined signals guiding when to reduce risk, investors can rely on data rather than emotion.
This transforms risk from something unpredictable into something actively managed.
Summary: Preserving the next million
Building wealth is not just about identifying the next high-growth opportunity — it's equally about avoiding significant losses. For accredited investors, access to more sophisticated strategies is often the defining advantage.
The 60/40 portfolio was well suited to a different era — one defined by low inflation and steady growth. Today's environment demands a more adaptive approach. Tactical risk management offers a way to stay aligned with current market realities, helping investors move from a passive position to one of active control.
In a volatile world, it's no longer enough to ride along. Investors need to take the wheel.
Dan Dunkin contributed to this article.
The appearances in Kiplinger were obtained through a PR program. The columnist received assistance from a public relations firm in preparing this piece for submission to Kiplinger.com. Kiplinger was not compensated in any way.
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Technical trading models are mathematically driven and based upon the historical data and trends of both domestic and foreign market trading activity. This includes various industry and sector trading statistics within such markets. Technical trading models utilize mathematical algorithms to attempt to identify when markets are likely to increase or decrease and also to identify appropriate entry and exit points. The primary risk of technical trading models is that historical trends and past performance cannot predict future trends and there is no assurance that the mathematical algorithms employed are designed properly, that new data is accurately incorporated, or that the software can accurately predict future market, industry and sector performance.
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