A Balanced Approach for More Cautious Investors

Key takeaways:

  • Macroeconomic uncertainty has caused many investors to seek solace in cash. But history shows that using cash as a long-term investment vehicle can be damaging to wealth creation.
  • While it does not eliminate all the volatility, a balanced strategy – often defined as a mix of 60% equities and 40% investment-grade fixed income – can help investors mitigate downside risk while potentially participating in upside gains.
  • The 60/40 mix provides a portfolio allocation that instills confidence in maintaining market exposure through volatile conditions and has historically allowed investors to enjoy solid returns with less stomach-churning volatility than a 100% equity portfolio.

Investors have fled to the perceived security of cash at various points throughout past market cycles for myriad reasons. This flight to safety is as inevitable as the bouts of volatility that often precipitate it.

In 2023 and 2024, investors were still feeling the pain of negative returns in both equities and fixed income in 2022. That experience, plus the fact that cash was finally providing a good yield following the Federal Reserve’s rate increase, lured many investors to the sidelines. With savings accounts, money markets, and certificates of deposit paying relatively attractive yields with minimal risk after a decade-plus of near-zero rates, some investors felt they weren’t sacrificing much to be in a risk-off stance.

In 2025, ongoing uncertainty around tariffs, inflation, geopolitical tensions, and the outlook for the global economy has caused many investors to continue to seek solace in cash or adopt a “wait-and-see” approach versus redeploying cash.

exhibit 1

However, this comes at an opportunity cost, particularly with equity markets hitting new record highs in September.

Investors will always need to have a certain amount of cash available for short-term savings or liquidity needs, regardless of what happens in markets. But history shows that using cash as a long-term investment vehicle can be damaging to wealth creation.

exhibit 2