Macro Interpretation丨Three-Dimensional Pyramid of Macro Asset Allocation: Constructing a New Framework – Research on Major Asset Allocation (Part 1)

Deep News12-04 18:12

1. **Strengths and Weaknesses of Traditional Asset Allocation Frameworks** In the field of asset allocation, the Merrill Lynch Investment Clock and the Pring Economic Cycle are two classic frameworks. The Merrill Lynch Clock is renowned for its simple four-stage division and clear "macro-asset" mapping logic. However, its limitations—such as oversimplifying reality and insensitivity to policy interventions and external shocks—have become increasingly apparent. The Pring Cycle introduces a six-stage model and a "leading-synchronous-lagging" indicator system, offering a more refined analytical perspective. Yet, like the Merrill Lynch Clock, it relies on the idealized assumption of a fixed economic sequence, making it difficult to adapt to today’s complex and volatile macro environment.

2. **The Need for a New Framework** Given the limitations of traditional frameworks and four key shifts, constructing a new analytical framework is necessary: - **Geopolitics** has evolved from a peripheral factor to a foundational driver and long-term constraint on asset prices. - **Data Lag**: Traditional frameworks rely on lagging data, lacking forward-looking insights into asset price drivers and turning points. - **Multi-Scale Analysis**: Asset allocation must account for both short-term business cycles (2–5 years) and long-term financial cycles (8–30 years) to avoid strategic misjudgments. - **Financial Variables**: Modern frameworks must treat financial indicators (e.g., credit cycles, liquidity) as core drivers alongside实体经济 metrics, integrating quantifiable and observable indicators.

3. **Constructing the New Framework** This report proposes the **"Three-Dimensional Pyramid of Macro Asset Allocation,"** comprising three synergistic layers: - **Strategic Layer**: Focuses on long-term financial cycles (8–30 years), using indicators like credit/GDP gaps and real estate prices to anchor long-term pricing and risk appetite, identifying systemic risk accumulation/release. - **Tactical Layer**: Combines the Real Economy Cycle Index (RECI) and Financial Conditions Index (FCI) to form an eight-state decision matrix (e.g., "RECI up + FCI easing" favors equities; "RECI down + FCI tightening" favors cash), capturing mid-term asset rotation opportunities. - **Disturbance Layer**: Introduces the Geopolitical Risk Index (GPR) as an exogenous shock absorber, adjusting for突发事件 like conflicts or sanctions.

4. **Asset Allocation Under the New Framework** The framework follows a **"strategic direction, tactical rotation, disturbance hedging"** approach: - **Strategic Layer**: Sets long-term benchmarks (e.g., overweight equities during financial cycle upswings; favor bonds during downturns). - **Tactical Layer**: Dynamically adjusts based on the eight-state matrix (e.g., equities thrive in "RECI up + FCI easing"; cash outperforms in "RECI down + FCI tightening"). - **Disturbance Layer**: Activates global避险 modes during GPR spikes (e.g.,黄金, USD, long-term Treasuries), stress-testing prior allocations.

The **Three-Dimensional Pyramid** provides a systematic, dynamic, and actionable tool for investors navigating complex macro environments, bridging macro analysis to concrete asset allocation.

**Key Innovations**: - **Multi-Time Horizon Integration**: Simultaneously addresses short-, mid-, and long-term drivers. - **Quantifiable Indicators**: RECI, FCI, and GPR offer measurable, real-time inputs. - **Flexibility**: Adapts to structural shifts (e.g., deglobalization, policy interventions) and "black swan" events.

(For empirical backtesting and sector-specific applications, see Part 2 of this research.)

Disclaimer: Investing carries risk. This is not financial advice. The above content should not be regarded as an offer, recommendation, or solicitation on acquiring or disposing of any financial products, any associated discussions, comments, or posts by author or other users should not be considered as such either. It is solely for general information purpose only, which does not consider your own investment objectives, financial situations or needs. TTM assumes no responsibility or warranty for the accuracy and completeness of the information, investors should do their own research and may seek professional advice before investing.

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