Morgan Stanley Chief Investment Officer Mike Wilson is promoting a shift from the traditional 60/40 portfolio to a 60/20/20 strategy, allocating 20% to equities, 20% to bonds, and 20% to gold. He argues that this setup provides stronger inflation protection, given limited upside in U.S. stocks versus Treasuries and investor demands for higher long-term bond yields.
Unlike the conventional 60/40 model that relies on stocks and bonds offsetting each other, Wilson views gold as the new “anti-fragile” hedge, complementing high-quality equities. He favors shorter-term Treasuries, such as five-year notes, over 10-year bonds to capture better rolling returns.
Wilson describes gold and equities as dual hedges: equities offer growth-driven upside, while gold performs as a safe-haven when real interest rates fall. His comments come as U.S. equities, boosted by Trump’s April 2 tariff announcement, have climbed back from near bear-market levels, with the S&P 500 and Nasdaq posting fresh highs in September despite the month’s weak seasonal reputation.