Benchmark

Definition

A benchmark is a standard or point of reference used to evaluate the performance of an investment or portfolio. Most commonly, benchmarks are indexes like the S&P 500, representing a passive alternative or a market baseline.

Why It Matters to Investors

  • Provides context for assessing portfolio returns
  • Helps determine whether a strategy is adding value (alpha)
  • Offers a passive alternative to compare against active decisions
  • Encourages discipline by measuring results against a relevant standard
  • Assists in risk management and performance attribution

The TiltFolio View

We believe benchmarking is essential for understanding whether a strategy is truly delivering value. Both TiltFolio systems benchmark their performance against multiple standards:

The S&P 500, which represents a conventional equity portfolio
TiltFolio Balanced serves as a benchmark for TiltFolio Adaptive, showing how the dynamic system compares to our static allocation approach
A diversified portfolio of 50% bonds (IEF/TLT), 30% equities (SPY), and 20% gold (GLD), which serves as a balanced and resilient baseline across different economic regimes

TiltFolio Adaptive seeks to outperform all benchmarks on a risk-adjusted basis. TiltFolio Balanced aims to provide steady, diversified returns with lower volatility than pure equity exposure. Both systems prioritize risk-adjusted returns over raw performance.

Real-World Application

• A portfolio returning 10% annually may seem strong, but if the S&P 500 returned 15%, it underperformed the benchmark

• If the same portfolio only had half the volatility and a lower drawdown, it may still have outperformed on a risk-adjusted basis

• TiltFolio uses multiple benchmarks to capture both absolute and relative performance