Portfolio Protection 2026: Hedging Strategies for Every Investor
A −30% correction over 12 months is statistically normal every 4–5 years. If you’re not prepared, you sell at the bottom. This hub bundles every BMI hedging analysis: married put, Permanent Portfolio, gold ETCs, VIX bets, bond hedge — and which strategy fits which type of investor.
Level 1 — Diversification: World ETF instead of 5 single stocks. Level 2 — Cash buffer: 6–12 months of expenses in money market. Level 3 — Anti-correlated assets: gold + long bonds + Permanent Portfolio. Level 4 — Options: married put, collar, cash-secured puts. Each level builds on the previous one — they aren’t alternatives.
Section 1: Crash preparation & mindset
Before we talk about tools: mental preparation is 80% of hedging. If you know what you’ll do when the market falls −30%, you don’t sell in panic.
Section 2: Permanent Portfolio & asset-allocation hedges
The more elegant version of hedging: 4 uncorrelated asset classes, equally weighted, rebalanced annually. Harry Browne’s Permanent Portfolio has a 50-year track record with 6% p.a. nominal and only one negative year.
Section 3: Options & married put
The most direct hedging method: buy put options that gain value when prices fall. Cost: 1–3% per year insurance premium. Not for everyone, but effective for large portfolios.
Section 4: Crisis sectors & anti-cycle plays
Some sectors run against the market: gold miners in inflationary phases, healthcare in recessions, utilities during rate cuts. This “anti-cycle” allocation is also a hedge.
Section 5: Diversification tools (DIY)
Which hedging strategy fits which investor?
| Investor type | Recommended strategy | Cost | Effort |
|---|---|---|---|
| Beginner / DIY savings plan | World ETF + 6 mo. cash + 5% gold | 0.2% TER | Very low |
| Experienced investor 50k+ | Permanent Portfolio (25/25/25/25) | 0.3% TER | Low (rebalance 1x/year) |
| Retirement saver 65+ | 3-bucket strategy | 0.2% TER | Medium |
| Wealthy 250k+ | Married put on world ETF + gold + bonds | 1–2% p.a. | Medium-high |
| Active trader | Options, VIX calls, tail hedges | 2–5% p.a. | High |
Common questions on hedging
Is hedging even worth it long-term?
Statistically: no, if you can hold buy-and-hold through a crash. Markets recover, hedging costs eat into returns. Practically: yes, if hedging keeps you from selling in a crash. The biggest return killer isn’t hedging cost — it’s panic selling.
How much cash should I hold?
Rule of thumb: 6 months of living expenses as emergency fund + an extra “crash reserve” of 5–15% of the portfolio. On a 100k portfolio: 5–15k ready for buys after a −30% correction. More than 20% cash costs too much opportunity.
Are bonds still a hedge today?
Ambiguous. In 2022 stocks AND bonds fell together (rate shock). Long bonds were a bad hedge. Short bonds (1–3y) and TIPS were OK. In 2026: bonds work as a hedge again in “normal” crashes (growth shocks), not in inflation shocks.
How does a married put actually work?
You hold 100 shares of a company, buy 1 put option on 100 shares at a strike price (e.g. −10%). On a crash: the put gains, compensating the stock loss. Cost: 1–3% of the stock position per year. Detailed in our married-put page.
What is the VIX and why should I watch it?
VIX = volatility index of S&P 500 options. Rises from 15 (calm market) to 30+ (crisis). Direct investment in VIX (VXX, UVXY) is not suitable as a hedge — contango eats the return. VIX as indicator: yes. VIX as direct bet: no.
Does gold work as a hedge?
Long-term: yes, against inflation. Short-term: usually yes, but in 2008 and 2020 gold initially fell with stocks (liquidity crisis). Recommendation: 5–10% gold ETC as a diversifier, not as a short-term hedge. More in the precious-metals hub.
Hedging tools for your portfolio
Correlation matrix, real-return calculator, DCA simulator for crash response.
- Correlation matrix for anti-cycle allocation
- Real return with inflation correction
- DCA simulator for crash buys
Related Hubs: Investor Glossary | About BMInsider
Try TradingView Free for 30 Days
Plus get a $15 discount on your first subscription through this link.
