Chapter 12
Implementation Strategies
Putting Theory into Practice

I have described the conceptual logic behind how to efficiently build a balanced portfolio. You have also learned the details of how to construct a balanced allocation by analyzing the economic exposure of various asset classes and appropriately weighting them. It is now time to take the theories that you have studied and apply them in practice.

If you are like most investors to whom I have described the balanced portfolio, your initial reaction may be that the allocation looks highly unconventional. Some of you may even go as far as to say that the logical sequence has been intuitive up to a point, but you are surprised by the unusual allocation and are not sure it makes sense. You may conclude that given historically low interest rates, it is crazy to maintain a portfolio with 60 percent allocated to fixed income strategies. If these concerns are on your mind (or if I just made you think of them), there are two main reasons you should not be overly apprehensive.

First, if one asset class looks unattractive for whatever reason, it is better to think of hedging yourself by adding offsetting asset classes rather than removing the asset class you don't like. For instance, instead of reducing Treasuries because you think yields are too low, you should simply own enough of the asset classes that do well in the environment in which Treasuries do poorly. If you cut the allocation to Treasuries, then you actually increase your risk because you are leaving yourself more exposed. This topic has been covered at length throughout this book.

A second reason you should not be alarmed by the makeup of the balanced portfolio is because you can think of this allocation as the efficient starting point. Consider it as the asset allocation you might want to hold if every asset class were fairly valued, interest rates were normal, and you had no opinion about the relative attractiveness of any market segment. You might also decide to hold this neutral portfolio if you felt that the odds of accurately predicting tomorrow's economic climate relative to expectations were too low.

The Balanced Portfolio as the Efficient Starting Point

You should always start with the portfolio that logically represents the neutral allocation. This is useful in establishing a solid foundation for investing in risky assets. The 20-20-30-30 asset allocation can be used, or some other mix that includes additional asset classes can serve as the efficient neutral allocation. So long as the methodology utilized to come up with the neutral asset allocation is that which was described in this book, you can use whatever asset classes you like to construct your balanced portfolio. With this efficient mix you have the opportunity to stay balanced, rebalance to the target allocation once per year, and forget the rest. You won't really need to worry about the economy's ups and downs or various market fluctuations.

Another way to view this is by saying that this is the allocation that you can hold if you have no opinion or views about which market might outperform next. By holding this mix you are essentially stating that you don't want to guess how the future economic environment will play out relative to consensus expectations. If the market is discounting 2 percent GDP growth and 2 percent inflation, by holding this balanced allocation you are indifferent to whether growth, inflation, or both underperform or outperform these expectations. You recognize the low odds of consistently outguessing everyone else about what the future holds. You realize that it is not enough to predict correctly whether growth or inflation will be strong or weak if your views merely match everyone else's, since those views are likely already discounted in today's price.

Implementing the Balanced Portfolio

Should you wish to proceed with the approach of investing in the balanced portfolio, you can easily implement the strategy by buying index funds. You can use index funds that track as closely as possible each of the asset classes that are included in your balanced asset allocation (again, it doesn't have to be the 20-20-30-30 mix presented here since that was an oversimplification to emphasize the key concepts). The advantage of index funds is they provide exposure to various markets at extremely low costs, far below what active managers typically charge to attempt to beat the market. The number of low cost index funds continues to grow, helping investors achieve market returns extremely efficiently.

Index funds are also generally appealing from a tax standpoint. Since they typically do not trade frequently (often just once per year), minimal capital gains are normally generated. Taxes and fees add up quickly, particularly when overall expected returns may be lower due to the interest rate on cash being exceptionally low.

Putting it all together, you are able to implement the balanced portfolio strategy relatively easily by using index funds. The result will be a very low cost, tax efficient way to gain exposure to the various markets in your efficient allocation. Most portfolios are far less efficient in all three respects. The allocation is imbalanced, the costs are more expensive (since an all-index fund portfolio is uncommon), and the taxes higher (for the same reason). Moreover, another advantage of implementing using index funds is that the portfolio will be completely liquid, transparent, and simple to follow. Few portfolios share similar appealing characteristics.

Trying to Improve upon the Balanced Portfolio

Practically speaking, however, much of the marketplace and media, and many research pieces, are focused on predicting the next trend. Prognostication is commonplace. You hardly hear anyone profess to have no idea of where to invest and that every asset class is fairly valued. Perhaps it is because such a conclusion is not interesting, or people actually think they possess great insight into the future. Holding an efficient market portfolio is fairly rare in today's world of information overload. People all seem to think that they have an inside track on tomorrow's winners. Unfortunately for most, the reality is that their long-term records do not support the high confidence they have in their purported expertise to accurately and consistently predict the future. Note also that if it seems that your market views generally follow the consensus perspective, then you most likely do not possess great insight, since what you think you know is probably already priced into the market. To hold true insight by definition requires a view that is different from the majority of investors.

Of course, despite these warnings, you can try to do better than the balanced portfolio. Before I proceed to various approaches that you can take to try to outperform the balanced portfolio, there is an important distinction that warrants explanation. Up to this point of the book, I have described a thought process that had the goal of efficiently capturing the excess returns that various asset classes offer. Over the long run, an approach that involves the simple assumption that an efficiently allocated portfolio of asset classes should be expected to outperform cash is sensible. History bears this out and the logic behind its construction makes sense. Thus, no skill is needed in order to attain these returns. You can simply hold an efficiently balanced portfolio and collect the excess returns above cash when asset classes outperform cash over the long run. This is why the balanced portfolio can be considered the neutral asset allocation. You don't have to successfully predict the future in order to earn a profit. This is not a zero sum game because everyone can hold the balanced portfolio and earn a positive return in relation to cash over time, since this is not a trading strategy or some other sophisticated construct to try to earn excess returns above what is readily available in the market. The only reason the balanced portfolio strategy may stand out and appear to be too good to be true is because the conventional approach is so inefficient.

If you wish to achieve a return potentially greater than that offered by a balanced asset allocation, you will have to take on a new risk. As a reminder, the risk you take with the balanced portfolio is that cash will outperform asset classes. I explained that this rarely occurs over longer time periods because the causes of such an outcome infrequently transpire. It is uncommon for the Fed to surprise the market by rashly raising cash rates. For similar reasons, markets generally don't suddenly discount future cash rates to materially increase. Finally, precipitous drops in risk appetite are unusual and normally short-lived. Of course, with the balanced portfolio you are essentially avoiding the biggest risk that investors face by owning asset classes, because you have largely neutralized the impact of unexpected shifts in the economic environment.

By moving away from the balanced asset allocation in the ways that I will explain in the rest of this chapter, you would be introducing a risk that I have yet to address in this book. By investing differently from the neutral efficient allocation as represented by the balanced portfolio, you will be taking what can be called active risk. To be successful against this risk, you need to possess exceptional skill. The balanced portfolio requires no skill for success because this is an efficient passive portfolio. However, any shift from this efficient mix does require skill to add value over time.

I will describe three major ways that you can try to outperform the balanced portfolio. First, you can tactically hold an asset allocation that deviates from the efficient allocation. For instance, you may feel confident that, looking ahead, growth is likely to disappoint (versus what is discounted in the market), and therefore you can opt to overweight assets that would benefit from this outcome and underweight those that would do poorly under these circumstances. Another approach that you might take to try to beat the balanced portfolio is by implementing the allocation using active managers rather than passive index funds. The active managers may be able to outperform their market segments and therefore add incremental returns to your portfolio. Finally, you can use a combination of these two approaches. That is, you can simultaneously tilt from neutral and use active managers.

Importantly, as I will describe in detail, each of these tactics for adding value above the balanced portfolio requires exceptional skill in order to prove successful over time. This is because active risk is a zero sum game. For every winner there is a loser. This must be correct because all of the stocks, bonds, and other asset classes combine to make up the total market. There exists an efficient allocation to the total market (i.e., the balanced portfolio). If you veer away from this allocation, then in order to earn more than the market you will need to possess greater skill than the average investor (who is pretty smart). Adding up all the winners and losers versus the efficient market portfolio results in zero net gains. This is the risk you take. You are risking that your bets versus the neutral portfolio will pay off and that whoever is taking the other side of your trade will lose relative to the efficient allocation. This applies both to tilts away from the neutral asset mix and to active management within asset classes.

You might guess right in the beginning or even several times in a row. However, to be successful over the long run you must be right more than you are wrong net of any costs associated with active risk. Some costs may include higher fees, more taxes, and greater transaction costs from trading more actively. I now discuss each of the three tactics you can adopt to try to outperform the balanced portfolio.

Tactic #1: Tilt from the Neutral, Efficient Starting Allocation

If you feel that you have superior insight to try to outguess the consensus view, then you can try to profit from your prescience. In other words, you can attempt to do better than the balanced asset allocation by expressing your market views. You can do this by overweighting and underweighting asset classes relative to the neutral allocation. Recall the neutral mix is what you would hold if you did not want to try to outguess the market. There may be times when you feel strongly that the market is wrong. During these periods you can express this view by tilting your allocation away from the neutral mix.

For instance, you might want to increase your allocation to equities versus Treasuries. If the neutral mix is 20 percent equities and 30 percent Treasuries, then you might increase the equities to 25 percent and decrease the Treasuries to 25 percent in order to express this sentiment. Each of these moves relative to the balanced portfolio can be considered a bet. You are making a bet that you know better than the market because you are moving away from the truly balanced allocation, which is agnostic to future economic conditions. Since both equities and Treasuries are falling inflation assets, you would only make this shift if you were confident that growth would be increasing more than consensus expectations. If this prediction comes true, then it would make sense that stocks would outperform their average return relative to bonds against their average return. In other words, you can express this market view by shifting the allocation from the neutral mix. The bigger the bet, the more significant your economic positioning. You can tilt more if you are more confident that you know the future. If you guess right, then you would likely outperform the balanced portfolio allocation; if you are incorrect in your forecast, then you will underperform the balanced mix.

A reasonable question you may be asking is the potential negative impact of rising interest rates on a portfolio that has a majority invested in fixed income investments. In general, rising interest rates pose a headwind for fixed income because the higher yield makes existing bonds less attractive and therefore results in principal loss. You might therefore argue that today a lower allocation to Treasuries and TIPS is warranted.

This simple logic, although seemingly intuitive, completely misses the point of having a well-balanced asset allocation. Because the portfolio is balanced, it is actually expected to perform about the same whether interest rates rise or fall. The same question should be asked when stocks rise or fall. Rather than be worried about the outcome, the key is to understand what kind of economic environment would cause interest rates to rise. You can diversify against the cause by owning asset classes that are biased to outperform during the same environment. If you focus on the outcome instead and try to protect yourself against that scenario, then you risk exposing yourself to another outcome because this approach will take you away from good balance. The protection comes in being balanced, not in avoiding the asset class you expect will perform poorly.

Following this logic, if interest rates rise due to strong growth, then Treasuries and TIPS would both likely underperform, but stocks and commodities would be biased to provide above-average results. If, however, interest rates rise due to rising inflation, then the outperformance of TIPS and commodities would likely offset the downside of Treasuries. Note that TIPS bonds may actually be a positive contributor if it were inflation that caused rates to rise because of the inflation component of these securities. These inflation hedges make up half of the fixed income holdings of the balanced portfolio. It may look like Treasuries lose in either case. However, if rates do not rise as much as priced in or if they actually fall, then Treasuries would provide a much-needed boost. This is precisely what happened from 2007 to 2013, when most investors had assumed interest rates were going to rise because they were so low relative to historical levels. Since the portfolio is well-balanced, then the losses from Treasuries, TIPS, or both would be offset by the outperforming asset classes to roughly net out at the average excess return from all asset classes, just as would be the case if interest rates fell.

Consider also that imbalanced portfolios (such as 60/40) may actually do worse than the balanced portfolio during rising interest rate periods because they are underweight inflation hedges. If inflation rises, then both the 60 percent and 40 percent components would likely underperform. This is exactly what happened during the 1970s as stocks and bonds underperformed inflation. The 60/40 portfolio suffered devastating negative excess returns for over a decade with severe drawdowns and extended recovery times. In contrast, the balanced portfolio (as summarized in the chapter on Treasuries) outperformed 60/40 by a meaningful amount. The 60/40 portfolio may do well if interest rates rise due to strong growth because of the overweight to equities. However, the results will depend on how inflation plays out. If inflation also rises, then that would pose a headwind because neither stocks nor bonds are great inflation hedges.

Another common concern with the balanced portfolio relates to the specific asset classes that I have used. Some experts have argued against the assumption that all of these asset classes offer a risk premium. In other words, some think that even though there is risk of loss from investing in an asset class, it does not guarantee that there is an excess return available to investors. If this were true, then there would be no benefit from investing in the asset class, since the main objective of the balanced portfolio framework is to capture risk premiums as efficiently as possible. If there were no risk premium to capture, then allocating to that asset class in the portfolio would not be advantageous.

In particular, there are concerns that commodities may not offer a risk premium looking ahead, even though this is a very risky and volatile asset class. The argument is that the number of speculators has vastly increased over the near term, effectively eliminating all the future excess returns of this asset class. Commodities are a unique asset class because this real asset is normally accessed using financial instruments, which can arguably be considered a zero sum game. For every winner there is a loser, because each transaction is technically a contract.

There is no clear answer to this question. The data still supports the existence of a risk premium because commodities have produced excess returns above cash over the near term. Furthermore, there is nothing unusual in the return patterns of late given the economic conditions that have transpired (falling growth and falling inflation—both of which are negatives for commodities) and the types of returns you would expect during such environments. It is very possible that opponents of commodities have simply mistaken poor recent returns as a flaw in the asset class rather than the more plausible explanation that it has predictably underperformed because of the occurrence of an unfavorable economic climate. Finally, the long-term excess returns above cash are relatively small to begin with. Despite the relatively low returns, the benefits of diversification and the fact that the positive returns come when you really need them still provide a benefit to including this asset class.

Throughout this book I have reinforced that the key takeaways are the concepts, not the specific investments provided or historical returns. Whether you agree with the argument that commodities, or any of the asset classes for that matter, no longer offer a risk premium is immaterial. If you don't like an asset class, then don't include it in your balanced portfolio. However, you will need to find another asset class that you think will cover the economic environments covered by the asset class you are excluding. It is the exposures that are key. If you can't find another reliable inflation hedge like commodities, then you may need to include it in your portfolio even if you don't favor it at present because it at least is biased to benefit you when you really need the protection.

Even with these caveats, should you decide to proceed with tilting away from the efficient allocation you can efficiently implement any active bet with the use of index funds. Since you are trying to add value by shifting the asset allocation, the application of this gamble comes from the difference in allocation. Thus, you are able to maintain a low cost, tax efficient portfolio and still try to add value over time by opportunistically shifting the asset allocation.

One notable implication of this analysis is that any asset allocation that is different from the efficient neutral allocation is effectively making a bet on a certain economic outcome. This is true even if the portfolio holder is unaware of it. For instance, if you think you are invested in a balanced portfolio and your allocation is the conventional 60/40 mix, then you are misinformed. The 60/40 allocation is a clear bet that economic growth will outperform expectations and that inflation will come in less than what is discounted. This fact can easily be observed by studying the environments in which 60/40 has outperformed historically.

Observe the Golden Rule: Diversification Always Trumps Conviction

One critical point should be made about shifting the allocation away from the balanced portfolio. The benefits of diversification are intuitive, reliable, and time-tested. It is not a zero sum game to hold a well-balanced portfolio because this concept only relates to capturing the excess returns of asset classes that are dependably and easily available. Everyone can do it and everyone can similarly invest in the balanced portfolio without detracting from anyone else. There does not need to be one loser for every winner. Due to these virtuous attributes, you should always observe the golden rule of investing: Diversification always trumps conviction. You should have greater confidence in the benefits of diversification than in your individual investment convictions. You might be convinced that Treasuries are the worst investment you can make. Notwithstanding this conviction, you should not underweight Treasuries relative to the efficient, neutral starting point too much. Your conviction that Treasuries are going to perform poorly is another way of saying that you don't expect growth to fall less than or inflation to rise more than discounted. Since you know that these outcomes occur about half the time, it appears foolhardy to feel so confident. Moving away from neutral is fine, but you should not veer too far away. How much is too much? There are no clear answers; however, moving your allocation to zero is certainly too far. Arguably, cutting the allocation in half may even represent too large a bet. As obvious as this may sound, most investors take active positions that are much more significant than what I am suggesting here. Not only is their starting point imbalanced, but they often take even bigger positions relative to this inefficient starting point than proposed here and are surprised when their portfolios experience excess volatility and underperformance.

Some professionals approach the asset allocation decision from a very different framework. They choose to invest in undervalued asset classes and avoid unattractive market segments. This approach may sound intuitive to those not trained to think in balanced portfolio terms. The problem, as you know, is that the asset allocation is most likely going to end up highly imbalanced. One way to reconcile these approaches is to start with a balanced portfolio as the neutral starting point. If you conclude that every asset class is fairly valued, then you would simply hold the balanced mix. If you have viewpoints that you would like to express in the allocation, then you can over- and underallocate from the neutral mix. And, of course, you should never allow your conviction in any area to trump the diversification of the asset allocation by significantly overweighting one or two market segments. Again, you should think about the economic bets you are making rather than the attractiveness of each individual asset you are buying. This is because of the appreciation that fundamentally each asset class is merely a bundle of economic biases and it is the cause-effect relationships that are most reliable through time. And, most critically, each asset class plays a role in the total balanced portfolio.

Tactic #2: Use Active Managers to Try to Outperform the Market

Another approach that you can adopt to try to do better than the balanced asset allocation is by using active managers to implement your portfolio. This is in contrast to using passive index funds to gain exposure to the various asset classes. A passive strategy typically refers to index funds. They are passive because of the lack of trading in the fund. The objective of index funds is merely to match the market, be it the stock market, bond market, commodities market, or some other market. Since the constituents of these markets do not change often, the index funds that track them buy and sell positions infrequently. Therefore, index funds are typically low cost and tax efficient.

Active funds, on the other hand, move around because they are vying to repeatedly buy low and sell high. Some funds do this by focusing on which holdings are in the indexes they are trying to beat and how their portfolios relate to these holdings. Others ignore the index and attempt to outperform over time by buying assets that they deem attractive and avoiding those that appear unappealing. Because of all the movement, these funds tend to charge higher fees and be less tax efficient than index funds. Additionally, the underperforming active managers eventually go out of business, leaving the ones with promising track records from which you must choose. This survivorship bias may make it seem that picking tomorrow's winners is easier than is really the case. In truth, a large percentage of the survivors owe much of their success to luck rather than skill and therefore may not achieve similar outperformance in the future (after you hire them).

If you choose to try to add value by using active strategies, then you would simply take your balanced allocation and implement each asset class using an active manager. For instance, if you have 20 percent allocated to global equities, then you might select one or two global equity managers or funds in which to invest this segment. With this approach you are taking the risk that the managers will do worse than the low-cost, tax-efficient index fund you could have used to nearly guarantee a market-like return. If after fees and taxes your active strategies do better than their respective markets, then you will outperform the balanced portfolio, even though you maintained the exact same allocation as the neutral mix. In other words, you can simultaneously hold a balanced mix of asset classes and use active strategies. Thus, your asset allocation may be balanced, but you may achieve an implementation advantage if you successfully select managers who possess skill in outperforming their respective markets. Conversely, you may still underperform the balanced portfolio because of an implementation shortfall.

As was the case with an active asset allocation decision, the use of active managers is also a zero sum game. For every manager that outperforms their market, there is another that underperforms. Adding up all the active strategies and funds results in a net negative, net of fees and taxes. This is because all the holdings make up the market, and since fees and taxes are taken off the top, the net result is less than the market by the amount of the fees and taxes. Since this is a zero (or negative) sum game, you should recognize the risk of using active managers to implement your balanced asset allocation. To be successful you need to have skill in finding managers who, in turn, possess skill. About half of the managers outperform the market over time. To add value to the balanced asset allocation, you need to find the half that will outperform in the future. Just because they outperformed in the past does not guarantee forward-looking success.

Tactic #3: Use a Combination of the Two Approaches

A combination of the two strategies just described may also be utilized. You may shift from the neutral mix and implement the portfolio using active managers. You may also combine the use of active funds with passive funds in implementing your portfolio. That is, some market segments may be more efficient (such as large capitalization stocks and TIPS) and therefore warrant the use of index funds along with their low fees and tax efficiency. Others may be less efficient (perhaps small capitalization stocks and commodities), which provides the manager with greater opportunities to outperform net of all added costs.

Note, however, that since you are combining two forms of value-added strategies, you stand a chance of either really doing well or falling significantly below the neutral mix's results. This is because both value-added approaches may not work simultaneously and detract value. Consequently, if you take this tack, you might want to temper your bets on both sides. In other words, you might take smaller active bets on the allocation and use fewer active funds in order to observe the golden rule of investing: Diversification always trumps conviction.

Other Implementation Considerations

There is indeed a growing trend in the investment community in favor of the balanced portfolio philosophy as this line of thinking gains popularity. Many of the largest pools of assets have shifted their strategy in this direction, and some of the most sophisticated investors are recognizing the inefficiency of their existing portfolios and are being drawn to the rationality of the balanced portfolio approach.

Despite these facts, the simple truth is that to an uninformed investor the balanced portfolio is unconventional. The vast majority of portfolios today still follow a 60/40 discipline, and investors have not fully adopted the balanced portfolio mind-set. Consequently, those who fully support this philosophy are likely to hold portfolios that are markedly different from their peers. For individual investors, peers may include friends and neighbors; for those fiduciaries responsible for institutional portfolios, co-trustees and representatives will be in that group. Either way, being different can be highly rewarding over the long run, but may occasionally pose challenges over short periods of time because of the dissimilar return pattern from the conventional portfolio.

Underperformance is an inescapable part of any strategy, so the key is not to sell at the lows and thereby lock in underperformance. Hence, complete buy-in is crucial (as it is with any approach to investing). You must know what you are doing and, most critically, why you are doing it. What you own and why it is there are two questions to which you should always know the answer. The risk of being different will decline over time as you gain confidence in your new approach and others gradually realize the benefits of the balanced portfolio strategy. Confidence comes from surviving downturns and experiencing the bouncebacks. It can also be generated from living through the consistency while traditional portfolios go through their usual roller coaster ups and downs. Moreover, as these concepts become more and more widely understood and adopted, your early acceptance of the approach will further reinforce your conviction.

The risk of being different is a true obstacle in implementing the strategy and should not be hastily dismissed. One suggestion to help minimize the impact is to think of the balanced portfolio as being on one end of the spectrum and the traditional portfolio at the other end. The spectrum covers the possibilities from well-balanced asset allocations to poorly balanced mixes. The balanced portfolio sits at one extreme, while a portfolio dominated by one asset class (perhaps equities) would fall at the other extreme. Since the traditional 60/40 allocation is highly correlated to equities because of its great imbalance, the conventional portfolio is also near the opposite end of the spectrum from the balanced portfolio. Picture yourself gradually moving across the spectrum from imbalance toward balance. You do not have to immediately shift from one extreme to the other. Any move in the direction of the balanced portfolio end of the spectrum would be beneficial since it would obviously entail improving the balance in your portfolio.

Perhaps you can make some shifts in that direction and test the results. The key is not the returns, but the cause-effect relationship along the way. In other words, don't add Treasuries to move toward balance and then be discouraged if Treasuries don't perform well over the short-run. Doing so would be analogous to buying fire insurance for your house and getting upset if you don't have a fire. The cause-effect relationship to observe is why the asset class you added performed as it did. If you bought Treasuries and they fell in value, then ask yourself why that occurred and whether that response makes sense given the shifts in the economic environment. For instance, if the economy strengthened more than discounted and Treasuries fell, then that would be something you should have expected, given those sets of conditions that actually transpired. The fact that it could have gone the other way should not be neglected. You obviously did not know which way it was going to turn out, and that is precisely why you moved in the direction of enhanced balance in your portfolio. If the economy had weakened, then Treasuries would have likely outperformed, as is their normal mechanical response to such an economic outcome. Step-by-step you can add asset classes and analyze their responses to shifting conditions to gain comfort with the cause-effect relationships and the logic. It is perfectly acceptable to take baby steps over time toward improved balance as a way to slowly introduce and become comfortable with this new way of thinking.

Summary

The bottom line is that you have options in how you implement the balanced portfolio. The most important thing, however, is that you first embrace the concepts and framework for how to establish the neutral mix. You should try to fully recognize why you are moving toward good balance before proceeding, so that you will be better able to appreciate and anticipate the patterns of returns you are likely to live through. The critical aspect of actually implementing the portfolio is to emphasize the fact that simply holding the balanced asset allocation over the long run is probably the safest and most reliable way to earn good, stable returns. Whenever you steer away from this approach, either by shifting the allocation to express your market views or by hiring active managers, you run the risk of underperforming. Consider the obvious fact that of all the people who try to outperform, at least half will be worse off over time. Therefore, if you choose to try to add value above the balanced mix, make sure to temper your bets.

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