In a world dominated by stocks and bonds, investors are constantly searching for assets that behave differently, especially during market stress. One of the most compelling (and still underused) strategies is Managed Futures, a systematic, trend-following approach traditionally reserved for hedge funds.
Today, thanks to ETFs like DBMF (iMGP DBi Managed Futures Strategy ETF), this strategy is finally accessible to retail investors.
But what exactly are Managed Futures? And, more importantly, do they deserve a place in your portfolio?
What Are Managed Futures?
Managed Futures strategies are typically run by professional managers known as Commodity Trading Advisors (CTAs). These strategies trade futures contracts across a wide range of asset classes:
- Equities
- Bonds
- Commodities
- Currencies
The key characteristic?
They can go long or short.
Unlike traditional portfolios that depend on markets going up, Managed Futures aim to profit from trends in any direction.
DBMF: Bringing Hedge Fund Strategies to ETFs
The flagship ETF in this space is DBMF, which aims to replicate the performance of large CTA hedge funds.
Instead of directly copying trades, DBMF uses a quantitative model (“Dynamic Beta Engine”) to reverse-engineer the positioning of leading hedge funds and replicate their exposures using liquid futures.
Key features:
- Exposure to multiple asset classes via futures
- Long/short flexibility
- Designed to track the SocGen CTA Index
- Expense ratio ~0.85% (much lower than hedge funds)
- Daily liquidity, no performance fees
This is essentially hedge fund replication in ETF form.
Most strategies are systematic and rules-based, often relying on momentum or trend-following signals:
- Buy assets that are rising
- Short assets that are falling
This makes them fundamentally different from buy-and-hold investing.
Historical Data Used on LazyPortfolioEtf.com
To build a long-term perspective, we rely on:
- KMLM Index (1988–1999)
- SocGen CTA Index (2000–ETF inception)
This combined dataset provides a 30+ year view of Managed Futures performance, capturing multiple economic regimes:
- Inflationary periods
- Equity bull markets
- Crises (2000, 2008, 2020, 2022)
This is critical, because Managed Futures tend to shine when traditional assets struggle.
Why Managed Futures Matter: The Diversification Effect
The biggest reason to include Managed Futures is simple:
Low (and sometimes negative) correlation to stocks and bonds
Managed Futures:
- Do not rely on economic growth
- Do not depend on falling interest rates
- Can profit during crises
They are often described as a source of “crisis alpha”: returns that appear exactly when you need them most.
Portfolio Impact: Real Diversification Examples
Let’s look at how Managed Futures can improve a traditional portfolio.
Example 1: Classic 60/40 Portfolio
- 60% Stocks
- 40% Bonds
Problem:
- Highly exposed to interest rates and equity risk
- Can suffer in inflationary regimes (e.g., 2022)
Example 2: Adding Managed Futures
- 50% Stocks
- 30% Bonds
- 20% Managed Futures
Potential benefits:
- Lower drawdowns
- Higher Sharpe ratio
- Better crisis performance
Look at the results (simulation period: January 1988 – April 2026)

The Advantages of Managed Futures
1. True Diversification
Managed Futures behave differently from traditional assets, making them ideal for reducing portfolio risk.
2. Crisis Performance
They often perform well during:
- Market crashes
- Inflation shocks
- Interest rate spikes
Historically, they delivered strong returns in periods like 2008 (+14.92%) and 2022 (+21.60%).
3. Ability to Profit in Any Market
Thanks to long/short positioning, they can benefit from:
- Rising markets
- Falling markets
- Volatile environments
4. Hedge Fund Exposure at Lower Cost
DBMF replicates hedge fund strategies without performance fees, making them accessible to retail investors.
The Drawbacks You Must Understand
Managed Futures are powerful, but not perfect.
1. Underperformance in Sideways Markets
Trend-following struggles when markets lack direction.
Expect long flat periods.
2. Complexity
These are not simple index funds:
- Derivatives
- Quantitative models
- Dynamic exposures
Understanding the strategy is essential.
3. Model Risk (Especially for DBMF)
DBMF does not directly invest in CTAs: it replicates them.
This introduces:
- Tracking differences
- Potential model breakdowns
4. Higher Costs vs Traditional ETFs
With ~0.85% fees, DBMF is significantly more expensive than:
- Equity ETFs (0.03–0.10%)
- Bond ETFs
When Do Managed Futures Work Best?
They tend to outperform during:
- High inflation
- Rising rates
- Market crises
- Strong trends (up or down)
They tend to lag during:
- Stable bull markets
- Low volatility environments
Final Thoughts: A Missing Piece in Most Portfolios
Managed Futures are one of the few asset classes that can:
- Improve diversification
- Reduce drawdowns
- Add resilience across market regimes
Yet they remain underutilized.
With ETFs like DBMF, investors now have access to a strategy once reserved for institutions, without the typical hedge fund barriers.
The key insight:
Managed Futures are not a return booster, but a portfolio stabilizer.
And in a world of uncertain inflation, shifting regimes, and fragile correlations… that might be exactly what your portfolio needs.

