Hedging Strategies

Adkins Capital Management — ACM Residential Real Estate Fund

Portfolio Hedging Strategies
& Risk Management Framework

Dynamic Tactical Overlay • Macro & Micro Scenario Analysis
VMBS · MBS Segment EQR · AMH · MAA · SUI · REITs DHI · PHM · TOL · FOR · Builders & Land TBT · TMF · ITB Puts · REZ Short · KRE Short MBB Calls · VMBS Margin · Case-Shiller HPI Futures
Model Portfolio Only — All hedging scenarios are hypothetical illustrations. No actual hedges are currently deployed. Not investment advice.

Portfolio Risk Management & Hedging Philosophy

The ACM Residential Real Estate Fund is constructed around a three-segment equal-weight architecture — 33.33% each in Agency MBS (VMBS), Equity REITs (EQR, AMH, MAA, SUI), and Homebuilders & Land (DHI, PHM, TOL, FOR). This concentration by design creates the need for a systematic, multi-instrument hedging overlay that can be deployed selectively across macro and micro stress environments without abandoning the fund’s core long-biased posture.

ACM’s hedging philosophy is rooted in asymmetric protection: the Fund is never fully hedged against all potential losses, as complete hedging would negate the ability to generate meaningful alpha. Instead, tactical hedges are sized and timed to cap material drawdown events at approximately 10% of NAV while preserving full participation in recoveries and upside cycles.

The Three-Layer Risk Architecture

The Fund’s risks aggregate into three distinct layers requiring distinct hedging tools. Duration and interest rate risk is sourced primarily from the VMBS MBS segment, with secondary exposure in REIT valuations. Credit and housing cycle risk is concentrated in the builder and land segment (DHI, PHM, TOL, FOR), which carry the highest beta to housing starts, absorptions, and median price movements. Systemic and financial stress risk affects all three segments simultaneously during periods of banking sector stress, regional credit tightening, or broad equity de-risking.

ACM’s toolkit spans inverse rate ETFs (TBT, TMF) for duration hedging, ITB put options for builder cycle hedging, REZ short for REIT segment protection, KRE short as a leading indicator and systemic hedge, MBB calls and VMBS margin leverage as yield-enhancing MBS overlays, and Case-Shiller HPI futures for direct home price exposure management.

Tactical Instrument Selection Framework

TBT (ProShares UltraShort 20+ Year Treasury) is the primary rate hedge — a 2x inverse of long-duration Treasuries that counterbalances VMBS NAV erosion and REIT multiple compression in rising rate environments. Its leverage ratio makes it appropriate only for short-to-medium holding periods.

TMF (Direxion Daily 20+ Year Treasury Bull 3X) is the tactical long-duration play in flight-to-quality environments and rate cycle pivots — ACM’s primary tail-risk hedge against deflationary recession scenarios. ITB put options on the iShares U.S. Home Construction ETF provide direct proxy hedging against the builder segment without the bid-ask slippage of individual option chains on smaller names like FOR.

REZ short (iShares Residential & Multisector Real Estate ETF) is the standard proxy short for the REIT segment. KRE short (SPDR S&P Regional Banking ETF) serves as both a leading macro indicator and cross-asset systemic hedge — regional bank stress historically precedes housing sector stress by 3–6 months. MBB calls are a yield-enhancement overlay on the VMBS position. VMBS margin leverage at 1.10–1.25x enhances yield carry without introducing credit risk. Case-Shiller HPI futures are the most direct macro hedge, deployed selectively against severe housing price correction scenarios (≥15% national decline).

Hedge Trigger Framework & Position Sizing

ACM employs a three-tier trigger system. Tier 1 (Watch): KRE underperforms SPY by >10% over 90 days, 10-year Treasury moves >75bps in 60 days, or housing permits fall >15% YoY. No hedges deployed; instruments are evaluated and sized. Tier 2 (Partial Hedge): Two or more Tier 1 triggers active simultaneously — ACM deploys 50% of target notional, typically via ITB puts and TBT. Tier 3 (Full Hedge): Active macro deterioration confirmed by two consecutive months of housing data weakness plus a credit spread widening event — full hedge targets across all three segments.

The maximum hedge budget is 4.0% of NAV annually in option premium, plus 0.5% in borrow and margin costs. Positions are sized to protect the 66.67% equity segment from drawdowns exceeding 15%, bringing total fund drawdown to the target cap of approximately 10%.

Tactical Hedging Instrument Matrix

InstrumentTypeSegment HedgedPrimary Risk AddressedTrigger ScenarioMax Budget
TBT2x Inverse Treasury ETFVMBS / REITsRising long-term ratesRate spike >75bps / 60d1.5% NAV
TMF3x Long Treasury ETFPortfolio-wideDeflationary recession / flight-to-qualityRecession signals + credit spread >300bps0.75% NAV
ITB PutsExchange-traded putsBuilders & LandHousing cycle downturn, builder margin collapsePermits <15% YoY & KRE Tier 21.5% NAV
REZ ShortETF short / proxy hedgeREIT SegmentREIT multiple compression, NOI stress10yr >5.5% or occupancy <91%0.75% NAV
KRE ShortETF short / leading indicatorSystemic / Cross-segmentBanking stress, mortgage credit tighteningKRE underperforms SPY >10% / 90d0.50% NAV
MBB CallsExchange-traded callsMBS SegmentRate pivot opportunity / yield enhancementFed rate cut cycle confirmed0.50% NAV
VMBS MarginMargin leverage on VMBSMBS SegmentIncome enhancement in flat/falling rate env.10yr stable <4.25% & positive carry1.25x leverage
CS-HPI FuturesOTC / exchange futuresPortfolio-wideNational home price decline >15%Tier 3 Full Hedge activation0.50% NAV

Instrument Descriptions — 8 Hedging Vehicles

The following write-ups describe each of the eight instruments in ACM’s tactical hedging toolkit — what each instrument is, how it achieves its market exposure, how ACM deploys it within the fund’s risk framework, and the key risks that constrain its use. These descriptions are intended to give investors complete transparency into the mechanics of every hedging vehicle the fund may employ.

TBT
ProShares UltraShort 20+ Year Treasury ETF
Type2x Inverse Rate ETFSegmentVMBS / REITsBudget1.5% NAV
Bearish on Treasuries — Profits When Rates Rise
What It Is & How It Works

TBT is an exchange-traded fund managed by ProShares that seeks daily investment results corresponding to two times the inverse (−2x) of the daily performance of the ICE U.S. Treasury 20+ Year Bond Index. When the index falls 1% in a day — meaning long-duration Treasury bond prices declined, implying rates rose — TBT is designed to gain approximately 2%. The fund accomplishes this through a combination of derivatives including Treasury futures, swap agreements, and options rather than through direct short-selling of Treasury bonds, which makes it accessible to investors who cannot hold margin accounts.

Because TBT resets its exposure daily, it is not designed as a buy-and-hold instrument. In volatile, mean-reverting rate environments, the daily reset mechanism produces volatility decay — a compounding drag that causes the ETF to lose value even when the underlying index is flat or mildly rising. In sustained, directionally trending rate environments — such as the 2022 rate spike — this daily compounding works in favor of the position, and TBT can significantly outperform a simple 2x multiple of the total rate move over the holding period. In 2022, TBT returned approximately 67% against a backdrop where the 20+ Year Treasury Index fell roughly 32% — the compounding effect added nearly 19 percentage points beyond the nominal 2x expectation.

How ACM Uses It

TBT is ACM's primary duration hedge for the VMBS mortgage-backed securities position and secondary hedge for REIT valuation compression. The VMBS position carries an effective duration of approximately 4.5 to 6.0 years. When interest rates rise sharply, VMBS prices fall — roughly 4.5 to 6.0 percent per 100 basis points of yield increase — and REIT equity multiples compress simultaneously as cap rates rise and borrowing costs increase. A correctly sized TBT position can offset a substantial portion of these losses in a rising rate environment, converting what would be a significant fund drawdown into a manageable decline.

ACM sizes TBT positions against VMBS effective duration, not modified duration, to account for the negative convexity embedded in mortgage-backed securities. At a 1.5% NAV allocation to TBT, the hedge provides approximately 3.3% of rate-move offset per 100 basis points of 20-year yield increase — enough to offset the majority of VMBS duration losses while leaving room for the REIT and builder segments to benefit from the higher-rate environment if the cycle is driven by economic strength rather than credit stress.

Key Risks & Constraints

The primary risks in TBT are volatility decay in sideways rate environments, basis risk between 20-year Treasury yields and the MBS spread component, and the leverage reset effect over holding periods exceeding one day. TBT should never be treated as a permanent portfolio hedge — it is a tactical instrument with a defined holding period tied to a confirmed rate cycle direction. ACM imposes a 90-day maximum holding period without re-evaluation and exits TBT if the 10-year yield reverses more than 50 basis points from the trigger level that initiated the position. The fund never averages into a losing TBT position.

TMF
Direxion Daily 20+ Year Treasury Bull 3X Shares
Type3x Long Rate ETFSegmentPortfolio-WideBudget0.75% NAV
Bullish on Treasuries — Profits When Rates Fall
What It Is & How It Works

TMF is an exchange-traded fund managed by Direxion that seeks daily investment results corresponding to three times (3x) the daily performance of the ICE U.S. Treasury 20+ Year Bond Index. When the index gains 1% in a day — meaning long-duration Treasury prices increased, implying rates fell — TMF is designed to gain approximately 3%. Like TBT, TMF achieves its leveraged exposure through derivatives: Treasury futures, swaps, and options, rather than direct ownership of long-duration bonds, and it resets this exposure daily.

TMF is structurally the mirror image of TBT but with 3x rather than 2x leverage and a long rather than inverse orientation. Its 3x daily leverage makes it one of the most powerful instruments available for capturing flight-to-quality Treasury rallies. In deflationary or recessionary environments — when investors flee equities and credit into the safety of U.S. government bonds — 20+ year Treasury yields can fall hundreds of basis points over a cycle, and a sustained, low-volatility rally in Treasuries can produce extraordinary returns in TMF through the same positive compounding effect that erodes TBT in volatile sideways markets.

How ACM Uses It

ACM uses TMF as a tail-risk hedge against deflationary recession scenarios and as an offensive overlay during confirmed Federal Reserve rate-cutting cycles. In a recessionary scenario — GDP contracting, unemployment rising, credit spreads widening — the Federal Reserve historically cuts rates aggressively, driving 20-year Treasury yields lower and producing significant price appreciation in long-duration bonds. The 2008 financial crisis analog is instructive: the 10-year Treasury yield fell from approximately 4.5% to 2.0% within 18 months, a move that would generate extraordinary returns in TMF through 3x compounded leverage on a sustained, low-volatility downward rate move.

TMF deployment requires all three of the following conditions to be simultaneously satisfied: recession probability exceeding 40% based on leading indicators, the 2-to-10-year yield curve inverted for more than 90 consecutive days, and the Federal Reserve having signaled at least one rate cut in its forward guidance. When all three conditions are met, ACM initiates a TMF position sized at 0.75% of NAV — sufficient to generate meaningful gains in a rate collapse scenario without exposing the fund to catastrophic losses if the recession thesis proves incorrect.

Key Risks & Constraints

TMF carries extreme volatility decay risk in rising or volatile rate environments. A position initiated at the wrong point in the rate cycle — for example, when rates are still rising — will suffer rapid and compounding losses due to the 3x daily reset. The instrument is appropriate only in confirmed rate-declining environments. ACM constrains the TMF allocation to 0.75% NAV specifically because a total loss of this position — while painful — would not materially impair the fund. TMF must never be held through a sustained rate-rising environment, and ACM exits the position immediately if the Fed removes cut guidance from its forward dot plot.

ITB Puts
iShares U.S. Home Construction ETF — Put Options
TypeExchange-Traded Put OptionsSegmentBuilders & LandBudget1.5% NAV
Bearish on Homebuilders — Profits When ITB Declines
What It Is & How It Works

ITB is the iShares U.S. Home Construction ETF, managed by BlackRock. It tracks the Dow Jones U.S. Select Home Construction Index and holds a portfolio of U.S. homebuilder equities including D.R. Horton, PulteGroup, Toll Brothers, NVR, Lennar, and other construction-related companies. With over $2 billion in assets and high daily trading volume, ITB has one of the deepest and most liquid options markets among sector ETFs, making it the ideal proxy for hedging exposure to homebuilder equities.

A put option on ITB gives ACM the right — but not the obligation — to sell shares of ITB at a predetermined strike price before a specified expiration date. If ITB falls below the strike price, the put option gains in value. If ITB remains above the strike price, the option expires worthless and ACM loses only the premium paid. This asymmetric payoff structure is the defining advantage of put options over short-selling: the maximum loss is capped at the premium paid, while potential gains are substantial if the underlying experiences a sharp decline.

How ACM Uses It

ACM uses ITB put options as its primary hedge for the 33.33% homebuilder and land segment — covering DHI, PHM, TOL, and FOR. Rather than shorting individual builder stocks — which would require maintaining margin, paying borrow costs on potentially hard-to-borrow shares, and exposing the fund to unlimited upside risk — ITB puts allow ACM to purchase defined-risk protection on the entire sector in a single, liquid transaction.

Strike selection is calibrated to the specific risk scenario. In a Tier 2 (Partial Hedge) deployment, ACM purchases puts 5 to 8 percent out of the money with 6-month expirations — these require a meaningful sector decline before generating payoff, but the premium cost is modest (typically 2 to 3 percent of notional). In a Tier 3 (Full Hedge) deployment, ACM moves to puts 3 to 5 percent out of the money, closer to at-the-money, which cost more in premium but begin generating payoff much sooner as the position moves into a crisis scenario. Individual options on FOR, the smallest holding in the segment, have insufficient liquidity for direct hedging — ITB puts effectively cover the FOR position as a component of the broader homebuilder index.

Key Risks & Constraints

The primary risk in ITB puts is premium decay — options lose time value daily even if ITB moves sideways, and a put purchased in anticipation of a downturn that does not materialize within the expiration window will expire worthless. ACM manages this through disciplined trigger criteria: ITB puts are only initiated when at least two Tier 1 risk indicators are simultaneously active, and the fund never exceeds 1.5% of NAV in annual option premium budget for this instrument. The secondary risk is tracking error — ITB is cap-weighted and dominated by the largest builders, so a decline concentrated in smaller builders or in FOR specifically may not be fully offset.

REZ Short
iShares Residential & Multisector Real Estate ETF — Short Position
TypeETF Short / Proxy HedgeSegmentEquity REITsBudget0.75% NAV
Bearish on Residential REITs — Profits When REZ Declines
What It Is & How It Works

REZ is the iShares Residential & Multisector Real Estate ETF, managed by BlackRock. It tracks the FTSE Nareit All Residential Capped Index and holds a diversified portfolio of residential real estate investment trusts including apartment REITs (Equity Residential, AvalonBay, Mid-America Apartment), single-family rental REITs (Invitation Homes, American Homes 4 Rent), manufactured housing REITs (Sun Communities, Equity LifeStyle), and other residential property types. REZ is a highly targeted proxy for exactly the REIT names ACM holds — EQR, AMH, MAA, and SUI all appear as significant positions in REZ's portfolio.

Short-selling REZ involves borrowing shares from a brokerage and selling them in the open market. If REZ subsequently falls in price, ACM can repurchase the shares at a lower price, return them to the lender, and pocket the difference as profit. The fund earns this gain while also collecting a short rebate — interest on the cash proceeds from the short sale — which is a secondary income source in high-rate environments.

How ACM Uses It

ACM uses REZ short as its primary hedge for the 33.33% equity REIT segment. The choice of REZ over individual REIT shorts is deliberate. Shorting individual REITs — EQR, AMH, MAA, or SUI directly — creates quarterly dividend obligation risk: the short-seller owes the dividend to the lender on each ex-dividend date. Because residential REITs pay substantial dividends (typically 3 to 5 percent annually), maintaining large individual REIT shorts for extended periods creates a meaningful carry cost that erodes the economic rationale of the hedge. REZ short avoids this by providing sector-level exposure at a single transaction cost, with only the fund-level dividend obligation rather than the individual security obligation.

REZ is deployed at 50% of target size at Tier 2 trigger (two or more Tier 1 risk indicators active simultaneously) and at full target size at Tier 3 trigger. The target size is calibrated to offset approximately 70 to 80 percent of the projected REIT segment drawdown within the fund's total hedge budget constraint. In a severe REIT crisis — such as the 2008-2009 analog where residential REITs fell 40 to 55 percent — a full REZ short position sized at 0.75% NAV notional generates gains that significantly offset the REIT segment losses.

Key Risks & Constraints

Short positions carry theoretically unlimited upside risk — if REZ rallies sharply while ACM holds a short, the fund incurs losses proportional to the rally with no ceiling. This is the fundamental asymmetry between long positions (maximum loss is 100%) and short positions (maximum loss is unlimited). ACM manages this through strict position sizing (0.75% NAV maximum notional) and clear exit criteria: REZ short is closed when the Tier 2 or Tier 3 conditions that triggered it are no longer met, or when REIT occupancy and NOI metrics stabilize above defined thresholds. Borrow costs and dividend obligations are monitored monthly.

KRE Short
SPDR S&P Regional Banking ETF — Short Position
TypeETF Short / Leading Indicator HedgeSegmentSystemic / Cross-SegmentBudget0.50% NAV
Bearish on Regional Banks — Profits When KRE Declines
What It Is & How It Works

KRE is the SPDR S&P Regional Banking ETF, managed by State Street Global Advisors. It tracks the S&P Regional Banks Select Industry Index and holds an equal-weighted portfolio of U.S. regional banking institutions — banks with assets typically in the range of $10 billion to $300 billion. Regional banks are the primary lenders to real estate developers, homebuilders, and REIT operators in the United States. They provide construction loans, land acquisition financing, bridge lending, and commercial real estate mortgages at levels that the large money-center banks have historically avoided.

Because regional banks are so deeply embedded in residential real estate finance, stress in the regional banking sector is one of the most reliable leading indicators of stress in the residential real estate sector, typically preceding housing market deterioration by 3 to 6 months. The 2023 regional bank stress events — Silicon Valley Bank, Signature Bank, First Republic — preceded a material tightening of construction lending standards and contributed to the deceleration in new housing starts that followed. The 2008 analog was even more stark: regional bank failures and stress began cascading 6 to 12 months before the peak of the housing price decline.

How ACM Uses It

ACM uses KRE short in two distinct ways. First, as a leading indicator monitor: KRE underperforming the S&P 500 by more than 10% over a rolling 90-day window is a Tier 1 risk trigger that initiates the fund's full risk evaluation process. This signal alone does not deploy a hedge — it signals that the broader risk assessment should be elevated. Second, as an active cross-segment hedge: once Tier 2 or Tier 3 conditions are met, a KRE short position is initiated because regional bank deterioration directly correlates with tightening credit for homebuilders (reducing lot financing and construction loan availability) and for REITs (increasing refinancing costs and reducing acquisition financing). The KRE short thus hedges the same underlying deterioration across all three fund segments simultaneously.

The 0.50% NAV budget for KRE short reflects its role as a systemic hedge rather than a primary segment hedge. It supplements TBT (rate hedge), REZ short (REIT hedge), and ITB puts (builder hedge) rather than replacing any of them. In a scenario where all four are deployed simultaneously — a full Tier 3 event — the combined hedges are calibrated to limit total fund drawdown to approximately 10% even if the equity segments fall 40 to 50 percent.

Key Risks & Constraints

KRE short is subject to the same unlimited upside risk as all short positions. Regional bank stocks can rally sharply on positive earnings surprises, Federal Reserve pivot signals, or government intervention — all of which have occurred historically. ACM limits KRE short exposure to 0.50% NAV notional and monitors borrow costs monthly, as regional bank shares can become difficult or expensive to borrow during periods of elevated short interest. The position is sized and managed as a tactical cross-segment hedge with defined entry and exit criteria, never as a speculative standalone short.

MBB Calls
iShares MBS ETF — Call Options
TypeExchange-Traded Call OptionsSegmentMBS SegmentBudget0.50% NAV
Bullish on Agency MBS — Profits When MBB Rises
What It Is & How It Works

MBB is the iShares MBS ETF, managed by BlackRock. It tracks the Bloomberg U.S. MBS Index — a broad index of investment-grade U.S. agency mortgage-backed securities issued by Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and Ginnie Mae. MBB holds pass-through certificates backed by pools of residential mortgages and is structured similarly to VMBS. Both ETFs hold agency MBS, but MBB has a larger asset base and typically more liquid options markets, making it the preferred vehicle for options strategies on the agency MBS space.

A call option on MBB gives ACM the right — but not the obligation — to purchase shares of MBB at a predetermined strike price before a specified expiration date. If MBB rises above the strike price — because Treasury yields fell and MBS prices appreciated — the call option gains in value. If MBB remains below the strike price, the option expires worthless and ACM loses only the premium paid. Call options thus provide leveraged participation in a potential rally at a defined and limited cost.

How ACM Uses It

ACM uses MBB call options as a yield-enhancement and rate-pivot overlay on the existing VMBS position. The fund already holds 33.33% of assets in VMBS, providing direct exposure to agency MBS price appreciation in a falling-rate environment. MBB calls add leveraged participation in that price appreciation at a fraction of the capital required to increase the VMBS position directly, allowing ACM to amplify gains during a rate-cut cycle without permanently increasing the fund's fixed income allocation.

MBB calls are deployed in two scenarios. In a confirmed Federal Reserve rate-cut cycle, ACM initiates full-size MBB call positions (up to 0.50% NAV in premium) with 2 to 3 month expirations positioned 1 to 3 percent out of the money — close enough to benefit from moderate MBS price appreciation, far enough to keep premium cost low. In a tight MBS spread environment (option-adjusted spread below 25 basis points), ACM may initiate smaller MBB call positions even in the absence of a rate-cut signal, as tight spreads combined with stable-to-falling rates make MBB a favorable risk/reward overlay. The time-limited nature of options prevents permanent capital deployment in what may be a transient opportunity.

Key Risks & Constraints

The primary risk in MBB calls is premium expiration — if MBB does not rally above the strike price before expiration, the entire premium is lost. This risk is managed through disciplined trigger criteria (calls are only purchased when a rate-cut cycle is confirmed or MBS spreads are demonstrably tight) and by limiting the annual premium budget to 0.50% of NAV. The secondary risk specific to MBS call options is negative convexity: as rates fall and MBB rises, prepayment speeds on the underlying mortgage pools accelerate, which shortens the effective duration of MBS and can cap price appreciation relative to pure Treasury ETFs. ACM accounts for this in strike selection by targeting strikes slightly further out of the money than equivalent Treasury ETF options.

VMBS Margin
Vanguard Mortgage-Backed Securities ETF — Margin Leverage
TypeMargin Leverage on Core MBS PositionSegmentMBS SegmentBudget1.10x–1.25x Leverage
Income Enhancement — Amplifies Yield Carry on VMBS
What It Is & How It Works

VMBS margin leverage involves using broker-provided margin credit to hold a larger position in VMBS than the fund's allocated capital would otherwise support. Rather than holding VMBS equal to exactly 33.33% of NAV, ACM borrows against the VMBS position and uses the proceeds to purchase additional VMBS shares — effectively increasing the MBS exposure to 36.67% to 41.67% of NAV at 1.10x to 1.25x leverage respectively. The VMBS position serves as collateral for the margin loan, and the fund pays the broker's margin borrowing rate (typically SOFR plus a spread) on the borrowed capital.

VMBS margin leverage is structurally different from leveraged ETFs like TBT and TMF in one critical way: there is no daily reset mechanism and no compounding decay. The position is simply a larger holding of the same agency MBS ETF, funded partly by borrowed capital. The leverage ratio is stable and does not change unless ACM actively adjusts it or a margin call forces a reduction. This makes VMBS margin leverage a more predictable and manageable form of leverage than leveraged ETFs, appropriate for longer holding periods as long as the carry remains positive.

How ACM Uses It

ACM deploys VMBS margin leverage as an income-enhancement overlay in flat-to-declining rate environments where the yield carry on VMBS exceeds the cost of margin borrowing by at least 25 basis points. The economic rationale is straightforward: if VMBS yields 4.5% and margin borrowing costs 4.0%, the net carry on the leveraged increment is positive at 50 basis points. At 1.20x leverage on a 33.33% NAV VMBS position, this incremental carry adds approximately 33 to 35 basis points of annualized income to the total fund — meaningful enhancement delivered entirely through the agency guarantee rather than through credit risk.

The maximum leverage is set at 1.25x, which provides a 17% cushion against margin maintenance requirements — VMBS would need to fall more than 20% from its current level before a margin call could be triggered, an outcome that has occurred only once in the history of agency MBS (during the 2022 rate shock). The leverage is strictly constrained to flat-to-declining rate environments: any confirmed rising-rate signal immediately triggers a reduction in leverage back to 1.0x, because margin leverage amplifies rate-driven NAV declines proportionally.

Key Risks & Constraints

The primary risk in VMBS margin leverage is rate amplification: at 1.20x leverage, a 6% VMBS decline from rates rising 100 basis points becomes a 7.2% loss on the leveraged position, plus the ongoing cost of margin interest. This is why ACM constrains the instrument to confirmed rate-stable or declining environments. The secondary risk is carry inversion — if short-term borrowing rates rise above VMBS yields, the carry turns negative and the strategy destroys value rather than creating it. ACM monitors the carry differential monthly and exits the leveraged position immediately if carry turns negative. The tertiary risk is liquidity: in a severe market stress event, margin lenders can increase margin requirements or restrict borrowing, forcing involuntary position reduction at adverse prices.

CS-HPI Futures
Case-Shiller Home Price Index Futures
TypeOTC / Exchange-Traded Futures ContractsSegmentPortfolio-WideBudget0.50% NAV
Short Home Prices — Profits When National Home Prices Decline
What It Is & How It Works

The S&P/Case-Shiller Home Price Index (HPI) is the most widely followed benchmark for U.S. residential home price levels. Published monthly with a two-month lag, it measures the change in resale prices of single-family homes across major metropolitan areas and a national composite. Futures contracts on the Case-Shiller HPI are traded on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME) and, in larger sizes, in the over-the-counter institutional market. A single Case-Shiller futures contract represents a defined notional exposure to the HPI for a specific metropolitan area or for the national composite, with settlement based on the published index level at a future date.

A short position in Case-Shiller HPI futures profits when the published index level falls below the price at which the contract was sold. If the national composite HPI falls 10 percent from the contract entry price by the settlement date, ACM receives a cash settlement equal to that 10 percent decline times the contract notional — a direct, linear hedge on home price levels. No other widely available instrument provides this direct exposure to national home price change rather than to the equity performance of home-related companies.

How ACM Uses It

ACM holds Case-Shiller HPI futures short as a Tier 3 reserve hedge — the definitive macro instrument deployed only in the most severe housing correction scenarios. The instrument is reserved for scenarios where ACM forecasts a national home price decline of 15% or more, which would severely impair the homebuilder and land segment (destroying builder margins and FOR's land bank value), damage REIT fundamentals (compressing residential real estate valuations broadly), and potentially stress agency MBS (through rising delinquencies on high-LTV mortgages originated near price peaks).

The strategic value of CS-HPI futures is their direct economic relationship to the underlying asset class. When homebuilder stocks fall 40 to 50 percent in a housing downturn, it is because home prices have fallen — not because of some derivative relationship that may or may not track cleanly. A short CS-HPI futures position falls on the same fundamental driver as the fund's long equity positions, making it the purest available hedge for the macro housing risk that the entire fund is exposed to. The two-month publication lag in the Case-Shiller index is a limitation — the futures market prices in expected future index levels rather than current spot prices — but this is acceptable in a position intended for multi-month holding periods in a deep housing correction scenario.

Key Risks & Constraints

CS-HPI futures carry several notable risks. First, liquidity risk: the CME futures market for Case-Shiller contracts is significantly less liquid than equity or Treasury futures, with wide bid-ask spreads and limited open interest outside of the nearest few contracts. Large positions may be difficult to exit at favorable prices. Second, publication lag risk: the two-month delay in Case-Shiller data means that settlement prices reflect conditions from two months prior, which can cause mark-to-market volatility that does not reflect the actual current trajectory of home prices. Third, geographic basis risk: the national composite index may diverge from the specific markets most relevant to ACM's holdings — if the Phoenix and Austin markets fall sharply (which are most relevant to FOR's land bank) while the national composite holds up due to strength in other cities, the hedge provides incomplete protection. ACM limits CS-HPI futures to 0.50% NAV notional specifically because of these liquidity and basis constraints.


Macro Scenario Dashboards — 5 Risk Environments

The following five dashboards model the fund’s exposure and tactical hedge response across the most consequential macro risk environments for residential real estate. Each scenario presents three distinct regime states, allowing ACM to pre-position hedges before conditions deteriorate.

Macro Dashboard 1 of 5

Interest Rate Cycle Scenario

Rising Rate Environment
Federal Funds Rate +200-500bps cycle; 10-year Treasury moving from 3.5% toward 5.5%+
VMBS - MBS Segment
-8% to -14%
Duration loss as discount rates rise. VMBS negative convexity amplifies losses when prepayments slow. 2022 analog: VMBS fell 11.75%.
REIT Segment
-20% to -35%
Cap rate expansion compresses REIT NAV. Higher borrowing costs cut NOI. EQR and MAA most exposed as coastal and Sunbelt rents compete with mortgage cost.
Builders & Land
Mixed: -15% to +5%
Early cycle: demand holds, DHI/PHM/TOL benefit from mortgage lock-in. Late cycle: affordability collapse crushes demand and margins. FOR most lagged.
Primary Hedge Response
TBT - 2x Short TreasuriesREZ Short (REIT Proxy)ITB Puts (Late Cycle)KRE Short (Banking Stress)
TBT is the first-line instrument: every 100bps rise in 10-year yields delivers approximately 18-22% appreciation in TBT at current duration levels. A 1.5% NAV allocation offsets roughly 4-5% of VMBS drawdown and 2-3% of REIT compression simultaneously. REZ short is deployed at Tier 2 trigger. ITB puts are added in the late cycle when builder order books thin. KRE short provides additional hedge income as regional banks face NIM compression in sustained high-rate environments.
Rate Plateau / Peak Environment
Federal Funds Rate stable at terminal level; 10-year Treasury 4.5%-5.5%; market pricing eventual cuts
VMBS - MBS Segment
-2% to +4%
Duration risk stabilizes. Yield carry dominates returns. VMBS coupon income (3.5-4.5%) provides steady income. Market begins pricing in cut cycle, modestly lifting MBS prices.
REIT Segment
-5% to +10%
Stabilization of cap rates allows REIT multiples to find a floor. Rental demand elevated as homeownership costs remain prohibitive. AMH and SUI outperform gateway REITs.
Builders & Land
+5% to +20%
Builders benefit from rate stability - buyers adapt, buydowns become standard, cancellation rates normalize. Inventory constraint supports pricing. FOR land acquisitions accelerate.
Hedge Posture: Reduced / Transitional
TBT (Reduced / Hold)MBB Calls (Initiate)REZ Short (Close)
At peak rates ACM scales back rate hedges. TBT positions are reduced or closed as asymmetric risk shifts from further rate rises to eventual cuts. MBB calls are initiated on any confirmed pivot signal. REZ short is covered as REIT stabilization reduces the short thesis. Capital liberated from hedges is redeployed into long exposure to position for recovery.
Rate Cut / Easing Cycle
Federal Funds Rate declining 100-300bps; 10-year Treasury rallying from peak; mortgage rates falling toward 5.5-6.5%
VMBS - MBS Segment
+5% to +12%
MBS prices appreciate as Treasury yields fall. Prepayment speed increases reduce duration benefit (negative convexity). Net: positive but muted versus pure Treasury ETFs.
REIT Segment
+20% to +45%
Cap rate compression drives significant REIT multiple expansion. Lower cost of debt reduces financing costs and improves FFO growth. Historical analog: REITs rallied 40-60% in 2019 and 2009 cut cycles.
Builders & Land
+30% to +80%
Mortgage rate relief unlocks pent-up demand, driving traffic, orders, and backlog. Builder margins recover as commodity costs moderate. DHI and PHM see fastest earnings recovery. FOR land values re-rate sharply.
Hedge Posture: Leveraged Long / Offensive Overlay
TMF - 3x Treasury LongMBB Calls (Full Size)VMBS Margin (1.2x)
In a confirmed cut cycle ACM shifts to offensive yield enhancement. TMF provides 3x leveraged participation in Treasury price appreciation. MBB calls at full allocation capture price appreciation in agency MBS beyond VMBS passive exposure. VMBS margin leverage at 1.2x increases income generation while maintaining agency credit quality. All short and put hedge positions are closed or allowed to expire.
Macro Dashboard 2 of 5

Economic Cycle Scenario

Economic Expansion
GDP growth 2-4%; unemployment 3.5-4.5%; household formation positive; wage growth supporting rent and home price appreciation
VMBS - MBS Segment
+2% to +6%
Low credit stress. Stable prepayment speeds. VMBS returns driven by coupon income. Modest price appreciation as credit spreads remain tight. Minimal hedging required.
REIT Segment
+12% to +25%
Rent growth drives NOI expansion. Occupancy elevated (94%+). EQR coastal markets benefit from tech/finance wage growth. AMH and SUI benefit from suburban migration.
Builders & Land
+20% to +60%
Strong job growth drives first-time buyer demand. DHI and PHM entry-level volume accelerates. TOL luxury segment benefits from wealth effect. FOR land acquisition economics strongly positive.
Hedge Posture: Minimal - Offense Forward
No Active Defensive HedgesVMBS Margin (Optional 1.1x)
In full expansion the hedge budget is preserved rather than deployed. ACM maintains watch-level monitoring of KRE spreads and permit data as leading cycle indicators. Optional VMBS margin leverage at 1.1x may be deployed to enhance yield carry without adding equity risk. The full 66.67% equity allocation runs unhedged to capture maximum cycle upside.
Slowdown / Stagflationary Environment
GDP growth 0-1.5%; unemployment rising toward 5-6%; inflation sticky; consumer sentiment weakening; housing starts declining
VMBS - MBS Segment
-4% to +3%
Stagflation keeps rates elevated. VMBS yield remains attractive but price appreciation muted. Prepayment speeds fall as mortgage originations decline.
REIT Segment
-10% to -25%
Rising vacancy as job growth turns negative. Rent concessions begin in softening markets. REIT debt refinancing risk rises as maturities hit in high-rate environment.
Builders & Land
-20% to -40%
Demand evaporates as consumer confidence collapses. Cancellation rates spike above 30%. Gross margins contract 300-600bps. FOR land optionality value deteriorates as takedown schedules slip.
Hedge Posture: Tier 2 Deployment
ITB Puts (6-month, 5-8% OTM)REZ Short (Partial)KRE Short (Leading Indicator)TBT (Reduced)
Slowdown triggers partial hedge deployment. ITB puts are the primary instrument - 6-month expirations at 5-8% OTM protect against builder drawdowns that historically exceed 30% in GDP slowdowns. REZ short is initiated at 50% target size. KRE short is maintained as a leading indicator - regional bank stress accelerates ahead of consumer credit deterioration.
Recession Environment
GDP negative 2+ quarters; unemployment 6-10%; credit spreads widening; mortgage credit tightening; foreclosure rates rising
VMBS - MBS Segment
+3% to +10%
Flight to agency credit quality. Fed typically cuts rates in recession, supporting MBS prices. Agency MBS credit quality unimpaired - implicit government guarantee holds.
REIT Segment
-35% to -55%
Vacancy spikes as layoffs trigger lease terminations. Dividend cuts likely as NOI collapses. Historical analog: residential REITs fell 38-52% in 2008-2009.
Builders & Land
-45% to -70%
Demand collapses entirely. Impairment charges on speculative land (particularly FOR). 2008 analog: DHI fell 65%, PHM fell 72%, TOL fell 68%.
Hedge Posture: Tier 3 Full Deployment - Maximum Protection
ITB Puts (Full - 3-5% OTM)REZ Short (Full Size)KRE Short (Full Size)TMF - 3x Treasury LongCS-HPI Futures (Short)
Full Tier 3 hedge deployed. ITB puts sized to protect the full 33.33% builder segment. REZ and KRE shorts at full target size. TMF provides 3x leveraged flight-to-quality participation. Case-Shiller HPI futures added as the definitive macro hedge on national home price decline. Target: limit total portfolio drawdown to approximately 10% even if equity segments fall 40-50%.
Macro Dashboard 3 of 5

Inflation Regime Scenario

High Inflation Regime (CPI >5%)
CPI above 5%; shelter inflation elevated; construction cost inflation compressing builder margins; Fed maintaining restrictive policy
VMBS - MBS Segment
-6% to -15%
Real return negative as inflation erodes coupon purchasing power. Nominal rates must rise to compensate, causing MBS price declines. 2021-2022 analog: worst fixed income returns in 40 years.
REIT Segment
Mixed: -15% to +8%
REITs are a partial inflation hedge - rents can be escalated quickly. EQR and MAA short-lease structures allow rapid rent mark-ups. But cap rate expansion from rate rises may offset NOI gains.
Builders & Land
-10% to -30%
Construction cost inflation compresses gross margins. Builders must raise prices but face demand elasticity limits. FOR land cost basis rises as entitlement costs escalate.
Hedge Response: Duration Short + Selective Equity Protection
TBT (Full - 2x Treasury Short)ITB Puts (Partial)REZ Short (Selective)
TBT is the primary inflation hedge - in the 2022 cycle, TBT rose ~67% while VMBS fell 11.75%. A full-size TBT allocation directly offsets the VMBS duration loss. ITB puts are deployed selectively targeting builder margin compression. REZ short is considered when cap rate pressure outweighs rental income growth.
Moderate Inflation Regime (CPI 2-4%)
CPI 2-4%; shelter inflation moderate; real rates positive but not restrictive; Fed on hold or modest adjustment cycle
VMBS - MBS Segment
+2% to +6%
Ideal environment for agency MBS. Positive real yield. Prepayment speeds normalized. VMBS coupon income ~3.5-4.5% with modest price stability.
REIT Segment
+8% to +18%
Moderate inflation is the REIT sweet spot - rents can be escalated above inflation while debt costs remain manageable. EQR, AMH, MAA, and SUI all deliver positive NOI growth.
Builders & Land
+15% to +40%
Moderate inflation supports nominal home prices. Construction cost inflation manageable. Builder margins stable to improving. FOR takedown schedule on track.
Hedge Posture: Minimal - Core Portfolio Running Long
Watch Status OnlyVMBS Margin (Optional 1.1x)
Moderate inflation is the fund's base case target environment. All three segments perform well simultaneously. No active hedges required. ACM maintains watch monitoring on CPI trajectory - a breakout above 4% triggers TBT evaluation. Optional VMBS margin leverage at 1.1x enhances yield without material risk addition.
Deflation / Disinflation Environment
CPI below 2% and falling; shelter deflation emerging; home prices declining nationally; real debt burden rising for borrowers
VMBS - MBS Segment
+4% to +12%
Treasury yields fall in deflationary environment, lifting MBS prices. Agency credit quality unimpaired. Prepayment risk rises as refinancing activity surges. Net positive but prepayment-capped.
REIT Segment
-15% to -40%
Rent deflation is devastating to REITs - NOI falls while debt service is fixed. Occupancy declines as tenants downgrade. EQR coastal markets most vulnerable to tech-driven rent deflation.
Builders & Land
-40% to -70%
Home price deflation destroys builder economics. Land values collapse. FOR's land bank becomes a liability as lot prices decline faster than debt amortizes.
Hedge Response: Tier 3 - Full Equity Segment Protection
TMF (3x Treasury Long - Full)ITB Puts (Full - 3-5% OTM)REZ Short (Full)CS-HPI Futures (Short)MBB Calls (Rate Pivot)
Deflation requires full Tier 3 hedge deployment. TMF is the primary instrument - in deflationary recession, 10-year Treasuries rally aggressively (2008: 4.5% to 2.0%), and 3x TMF amplifies this dramatically. ITB puts and REZ short protect both equity segments. Case-Shiller HPI futures provide the only direct hedge on national home price deflation.
Macro Dashboard 4 of 5

Housing Supply & Mortgage Lock-In Effect Scenario

Mortgage Lock-In Effect - Constrained Existing Inventory
62-68% of existing mortgages locked below 4%; existing home inventory at multi-decade lows; new construction is primary supply source
VMBS - MBS Segment
Stable / Positive
Low prepayment risk as locked-in borrowers cannot refinance. VMBS duration extends, increasing rate sensitivity but income predictability. Positive carry environment with minimal credit risk.
REIT Segment
Strongly Positive
Lock-in channels housing demand into rentals. EQR, AMH, MAA, and SUI see sustained above-trend occupancy and rent growth as potential buyers cannot afford to move. SFR REITs (AMH) particularly benefit.
Builders & Land
Very Strongly Positive
New construction becomes the dominant supply available to buyers. DHI and PHM gain extraordinary pricing power. FOR land closest to entitled lots commands premium. New home market share peaks during lock-in periods.
Hedge Posture: Minimal - All Segments Structurally Supported
Watch OnlyTBT on Rate Risk (If Applicable)
The lock-in effect creates one of the most favorable demand environments for the ACM portfolio. The only residual risk is that mortgage rates rise further, worsening affordability beyond what builder buydowns can bridge. No equity segment hedges are warranted. The fund's builder allocation is maximally positioned to benefit from new construction's demand monopoly.
Lock-In Effect Easing - Rate Normalization Unlocking Existing Inventory
Mortgage rates declining toward 5.5-6.5%; existing homeowners beginning to list; months of supply rising toward 4-5 months
VMBS - MBS Segment
+3% to +8%
Rate decline supportive of MBS prices. Prepayment risk begins rising as locked-in owners refinance when rates fall within 50-75bps of their existing rate. VMBS duration shortens.
REIT Segment
Transitional: Mixed
REIT outlook bifurcates. EQR and MAA face incremental competition from homebuyers who can now afford to buy. AMH benefits from rising home values. SUI manufactured housing largely unaffected.
Builders & Land
Mixed: +5% to -15%
New construction faces emerging competition from existing inventory. Builder premium pricing must erode. Incentives increase. FOR land timing risk rises as pace of absorption may slow.
Hedge Posture: Selective - Monitor Builder Margin Compression
ITB Puts (Evaluate - Margin Risk)MBB Calls (Rate Decline Capture)
Lock-in easing is a nuanced scenario. ACM evaluates ITB puts as a precautionary hedge if builder gross margin guidance deteriorates more than 200bps from peak. MBB calls are deployed to amplify MBS price appreciation as rates decline. Net posture remains constructive - easing lock-in means more total housing market activity, broadly positive for the portfolio.
Supply Surge / Housing Glut
Months of supply rising above 6-8 months; overbuilding in key markets; builder spec inventory accumulating; price concession environment
VMBS - MBS Segment
Neutral to Modest Positive
Supply glut alone does not impair VMBS credit quality (agency guarantee). However, home price declines increase probability of future credit stress on non-agency MBS. VMBS coupon income continues uninterrupted.
REIT Segment
-10% to -30%
Excess supply competes with REIT rental units. Vacancy rises. Rent growth stalls or reverses. New apartment deliveries in Sunbelt (particularly MAA geography) most affected.
Builders & Land
-25% to -50%
Builders must cut prices and increase incentives to move spec inventory. Gross margins contract aggressively. Land values fall. FOR lot optionality value deteriorates rapidly as takedown schedules extend.
Hedge Response: Tier 2-3 - Full Equity Protection
ITB Puts (Full - 5-8% OTM)REZ Short (Full)CS-HPI Futures (Short - Moderate)
ITB puts are the primary hedge against builder drawdowns in supply glut environments. REZ short protects the REIT segment from vacancy-driven NOI deterioration. Case-Shiller HPI futures are deployed at moderate size as home price declines are the direct consequence of supply exceeding demand. ACM monitors months of supply monthly; a crossing above 6.0 months triggers automatic Tier 2 deployment review.
Macro Dashboard 5 of 5

Regulatory & Legislative Risk Scenario

GSE Reform & Fannie/Freddie Privatization Risk
Congressional or executive action to exit government conservatorship; implicit guarantee of agency MBS at risk; MBS credit spread widening
VMBS - MBS Segment
Severe if guarantee removed
Removal of the implicit government guarantee without explicit replacement would cause massive credit spread widening - potentially 100-200bps - devastating VMBS NAV. Probability historically low but politically non-zero.
REIT Segment
Indirect / Secondary
Higher mortgage rates from GSE reform increase rental demand as homeownership becomes less accessible - modestly positive for occupancy and rent growth. But systemic financial stress could overwhelm this benefit.
Builders & Land
-20% to -40%
Loss of agency guarantee raises conforming mortgage rates 100-200bps, crushing affordability and demand. Builder cancellation rates spike. FOR lot values decline as absorption pace falls sharply.
Hedge Response: Structural Review - Potential VMBS Rotation
VMBS Review (Partial Rotation to T-Bills)ITB Puts (Builder Demand Collapse)TBT (Rate Spread Hedge)
GSE reform is an existential risk to the VMBS position. ACM's response begins with a structural portfolio review - potential partial rotation of VMBS into short-duration Treasuries or T-bills while monitoring legislative progress. ITB puts are deployed immediately as builder demand destruction from higher conforming mortgage rates is the most directly quantifiable impact. ACM monitors GSE legislation in real-time and makes reallocation decisions within defined scenario thresholds.
REIT Tax Structure Change & Rent Control Legislation
Federal REIT pass-through tax benefit modification; national or state-level rent stabilization legislation; corporate AMT expansion
VMBS - MBS Segment
Neutral
REIT tax changes do not directly affect MBS credit quality or interest income. VMBS continues generating agency-guaranteed income regardless of REIT regulatory environment.
REIT Segment
-15% to -35%
REIT pass-through tax treatment is the fundamental structural advantage of REIT investing. Any modification decreasing this benefit reduces REIT equity appeal. Rent control directly caps NOI growth and destroys new development economics.
Builders & Land
Modestly Negative to Neutral
Rent control may redirect demand from rentals toward ownership, providing a modest demand tailwind for DHI and PHM. However, corporate tax changes raising builder effective tax rates create secondary margin compression risk.
Hedge Response: REIT Segment Targeted Protection
REZ Short (Full - REIT Structural Risk)ITB Puts (Evaluate - Demand Shift)
REZ short is the precise hedge for REIT regulatory risk - it targets the same residential REIT universe (EQR, AMH, MAA, SUI) without option liquidity constraints. A full REZ short position is deployed when legislative momentum on REIT tax changes exceeds a defined probability threshold (ACM tracks bill sponsorship, committee hearings, and CBO scoring).
Zoning & Development Regulatory Reform
Federal or state-level zoning deregulation (ADU legalization, upzoning, permitting streamlining) that structurally increases housing supply
VMBS - MBS Segment
Neutral to Modest Positive
Increased housing supply drives more mortgage origination volume, supporting MBS market depth and spread tightening over time. Near-term neutral - VMBS credit quality unchanged.
REIT Segment
Mixed - Geography Dependent
Upzoning increases rental supply, compressing rents in affected markets. EQR (coastal gateway) most exposed to ADU competition. MAA (Sunbelt) faces increasing apartment construction competition. AMH and SUI manufactured housing segments largely unaffected.
Builders & Land
Very Strongly Positive
Zoning reform is unambiguously positive for DHI, PHM, TOL, and especially FOR. Permitting streamlining reduces entitlement risk and holding costs. FOR's land bank would see material value re-rating as pipeline velocity accelerates.
Hedge Posture: Builders Overweight / REIT Selective Monitor
No Active Defensive HedgesREZ (Evaluate for EQR/MAA Exposure)
Zoning deregulation is structurally positive for the builder and land segment. ACM ensures maximum exposure to the FOR position and considers whether FOR's weight should be increased relative to other builder names. REZ short is evaluated selectively - only if rent deflation in EQR and MAA markets exceeds 200bps annually.

Micro Scenario Dashboards — 5 Position-Level Risk Events

The following five dashboards analyze position-level and instrument-specific risks requiring more granular hedging decisions. Each examines a risk largely idiosyncratic to one segment of the ACM portfolio and evaluates the optimal tactical response across three states of severity.

Micro Dashboard 1 of 5

MBS Basis Risk - VMBS vs. Treasuries

Tight MBS Spreads - Risk-On Environment
MBS option-adjusted spread (OAS) below 25bps; strong investor demand for agency MBS; prepayment speeds moderate
VMBS Position
Outperform vs. Treasuries
Tight spreads mean VMBS offers yield above Treasuries with minimal additional price risk. Total return enhanced by spread income. VMBS outperforms bare Treasury positions on a risk-adjusted basis.
Basis Risk Exposure
Low - Favorable
MBS basis compressed, reducing the risk of VMBS underperforming a pure Treasury hedge. TBT works effectively as a VMBS duration hedge because spread contribution is small relative to duration contribution.
Overlay Opportunity
MBB Calls / VMBS Margin
Tight spreads and positive carry environment is the optimal window to deploy MBB calls and VMBS margin leverage - both enhance income and participate in further spread compression without adding credit risk.
Overlay: Yield Enhancement - MBB Calls + VMBS Margin
MBB Calls (2-3 month expiry)VMBS Margin Leverage (1.15-1.20x)
In a tight spread environment ACM's response is yield enhancement rather than protection. MBB calls are positioned 1-3% OTM with 2-3 month expirations to capture further spread tightening or rate decline at low premium cost. VMBS margin at 1.15-1.20x multiplies income at minimal incremental risk given the agency credit guarantee. Combined, these overlays can add 50-100bps of annualized return to the MBS segment in favorable spread environments.
Normal MBS Spreads - Baseline Environment
MBS OAS 25-60bps; prepayment speeds normal-to-moderate; Fed QT ongoing; conventional 30-year mortgage rates 50-100bps over comparable Treasuries
VMBS Position
Inline with Benchmarks
Normal spread environment produces expected returns: Treasury duration return plus MBS spread income. VMBS total return matches Bloomberg MBS Index benchmark. No significant over or underperformance from basis.
Basis Risk Exposure
Moderate - Manageable
TBT as a Treasury-based hedge creates a modest basis mismatch - if MBS spreads widen while Treasuries rally, TBT hedges the duration component but not the spread component. Residual typically less than 50bps in normal environments.
Prepayment Risk
Moderate / Stable
At normal rate levels, a portion of the VMBS pool refinances annually, shortening duration and reducing reinvestment yield relative to coupon rate. VMBS negative convexity is manageable within this range but must be monitored monthly.
Baseline Posture: Duration Hedge Sized for MBS Effective Duration
TBT (Sized to VMBS Effective Duration)MBB Calls (Evaluate Monthly)
ACM sizes any TBT hedge to VMBS's effective duration (not modified duration) to account for negative convexity and prepayment optionality. The effective duration of VMBS in normal conditions is approximately 4.5-6.0 years versus a modified duration of 6.5-7.5 years. Oversizing a Treasury-based hedge to modified duration would result in over-hedging. MBB calls are evaluated monthly against the carry cost of the current spread environment.
Wide MBS Spreads - Stress / Liquidity Event
MBS OAS exceeding 75-150bps; Fed QT reducing market demand; bank balance sheet contraction reducing MBS absorption; mortgage origination volume collapse
VMBS Position
Underperform Treasuries Significantly
Spread widening of 75bps on a 6-year effective duration portfolio produces ~4.5% of additional losses beyond Treasury hedge offset. This basis risk is the primary unhedgeable risk in the VMBS position during financial stress events.
Basis Risk Exposure
High - Treasury Hedge Fails on Spread
TBT hedges duration risk only. In a spread-widening event, VMBS falls even as Treasuries rally. A TBT short Treasury position would compound losses during flight-to-quality events.
Prepayment Risk
Low - Originators Stop Lending
In wide spread environments, mortgage origination volume collapses as lenders tighten credit. Prepayment speeds fall to minimum levels. This extends VMBS effective duration - increasing rate sensitivity at exactly the wrong moment.
Hedge Response: TBT Removed / TMF Evaluated for Recession Scenario
TBT (Close / Avoid - Counterproductive)TMF (If Recession Context)Accept Residual Basis Risk (Agency Guarantee)
Wide spread events require an important decision: TBT must be avoided or closed during flight-to-quality events, as Treasuries rally while MBS spreads widen - TBT would compound losses. If spread widening is accompanied by recession signals, TMF is the appropriate instrument - it captures the Treasury flight-to-quality rally while acknowledging that VMBS spread loss is an unhedgeable residual protected by the agency guarantee.
Micro Dashboard 2 of 5

REIT Operational Stress - NOI, Occupancy & Debt Refinancing

REIT Healthy Operations Baseline
Occupancy 94-97%; same-store NOI growth 3-6%; FFO payout ratio sustainable; debt maturities refinanced at manageable spreads; dividend growth maintained
EQR - Coastal Apartments
NOI +4-6% | Occ: 96%
Tech and finance sector employment supports premium coastal urban rents. New supply in gateway markets constrained. FFO growth drives dividend increases and REIT multiple expansion. Interest coverage 3.5x+.
AMH - Single-Family Rental
NOI +5-7% | Occ: 95%
SFR demand structural - families locked out of purchase market at current rates. AMH benefits from high barriers to entry protecting market position. Rent growth above CPI. Strong FCF generation.
MAA / SUI
NOI +3-5% | Occ: 94%
Sunbelt population growth sustains demand despite elevated new supply deliveries. MAA geographic diversification reduces single-market exposure. SUI manufactured housing benefits from affordability premium across all rate environments.
Hedge Posture: None - Full REIT Exposure
Unhedged Long - Full 33.33% REIT Allocation
In healthy operational environments, the REIT segment runs unhedged. ACM monitors four key metrics monthly: (1) same-store NOI growth vs. prior quarter guidance, (2) occupancy vs. 93% threshold, (3) debt maturity schedule and current refinancing spreads, (4) FFO payout ratio vs. 90% ceiling. All four in green triggers no action. Any single metric flashing amber initiates evaluation of REZ short sizing.
REIT Operational Stress - Rising Vacancy & Refinancing Pressure
Occupancy declining toward 91-93%; same-store NOI growth slowing to 0-2%; debt maturities hitting at elevated rates; dividend growth paused; rent concessions emerging
EQR
-10% to -20% projected
Coastal tech layoffs reduce premium renter pool. New luxury supply absorbing marginal demand. EQR concession packages emerging (1 month free, reduced parking). NOI growth deceleration triggers multiple compression.
MAA
-8% to -18% projected
Record Sunbelt apartment deliveries 2024-2026 create localized oversupply in Austin, Nashville, Charlotte. MAA must offer concessions in overbuilt markets, pressuring portfolio-wide NOI growth below 2%.
AMH / SUI
Resilient: -3% to +5%
SFR (AMH) and manufactured housing (SUI) face less competitive new supply than apartments. Their demand bases are more price-sensitive, meaning affordability constraints actually support occupancy. Relative outperformers in REIT stress.
Hedge Response: Partial REZ Short - Apartment REIT Targeted
REZ Short (50% Target - EQR/MAA Stress)KRE Short (Banking Stress Monitor)
REZ short at 50% target size is deployed when EQR and/or MAA report two consecutive quarters of occupancy below 93% or NOI growth below 1%. REZ is the cleanest available proxy - it holds EQR and MAA as significant positions while also including AMH and SUI (outperforming). The net effect is partial hedge coverage on the underperforming apartment REITs while still maintaining net long exposure. ACM does not short individual REIT names due to quarterly dividend obligation risk.
REIT Debt & Dividend Crisis
Occupancy below 90%; NOI declining year-over-year; debt maturities unable to be refinanced at manageable rates; dividend cuts announced
EQR / MAA
-35% to -55%
Dividend cut announcement triggers forced selling from income-oriented REIT investors. Debt covenant triggers potential. Historical analog: apartment REITs fell 40-55% in 2008-2009.
AMH / SUI
-20% to -40%
SFR and manufactured housing REITs are more resilient operationally but not immune to broad REIT market discount expansion. Correlation with apartment REITs rises in severe credit stress events as institutional REIT redemptions are indiscriminate.
Refinancing Cliff Risk
Term Loan Repricing Shock
REITs with significant 2024-2026 debt maturities face the most acute risk. A 300bps refinancing spread widening on 30% of debt outstanding could reduce FFO by 15-20%, rendering current dividends unsustainable.
Hedge Response: Full REZ Short + KRE Short - Maximum REIT Protection
REZ Short (Full Size)KRE Short (Full - Bank Stress)TMF (Recession Context)
Full REIT crisis deployment. REZ full short provides maximum protection on the 33.33% REIT segment - target sizing approximately offsets 70-80% of projected REIT segment drawdown within budget constraints. KRE short addresses the systemic dimension - REIT debt crises are typically accompanied by regional bank stress as smaller banks are major REIT lenders. Target: limit REIT segment contribution to total portfolio drawdown to less than 4% even in a 40-50% REIT price collapse.
Micro Dashboard 3 of 5

Builder Margin Signals — DHI, PHM & TOL Gross Margin Monitoring

Expanding Builder Gross Margins
Gross margins above 24%; cancellation rates below 12%; ASP growth positive; lumber/labor costs moderating
Signal MetricDHIPHMTOLStatus
Gross Margin24-27%25-28%27-30%Expanding
Cancellation Rate<12%<10%<8%Healthy
Net Orders YoY+10-20%+8-18%+6-15%Strong
Incentive Cost / ASP<3%<3%<2%Low
Backlog Value6-9 mo5-8 mo12-18 moFull
Hedge Posture: Fully Unhedged - Maximize Alpha
No Builder Hedges Active
Expanding margins with healthy order book metrics confirm the builder segment is in a positive earnings revision cycle. No ITB puts are warranted. ACM monitors these metrics quarterly at earnings and monthly via census permit/starts data. A single quarter of gross margin guidance reduction below 22% triggers ITB put evaluation immediately.
Stable / Normalized Builder Margins
Gross margins 20-24%; cancellation rates 12-18%; pricing power maintained through incentives; demand-supply balance
Signal MetricDHIPHMTOLStatus
Gross Margin21-24%22-25%24-27%Normal
Cancellation Rate12-18%10-15%8-12%Watch
Net Orders YoY0-10%0-8%0-6%Slowing
Incentive Cost / ASP3-5%3-5%2-4%Rising
Backlog Value4-6 mo4-6 mo9-12 moThinning
Hedge Posture: Watch - Pre-Position ITB Put Evaluation
ITB Puts (Evaluate - 8-10% OTM)KRE Short (Leading Indicator Monitor)
Stable-to-softening margins trigger ACM's watch protocol. ITB puts at 8-10% out of the money are evaluated for initiation - at this strike level, premium cost is modest (2-3% of notional) and protection begins only if the builder segment drops meaningfully. The cost-benefit is favorable given the asymmetric downside if multiple metrics deteriorate simultaneously. KRE is monitored as a leading indicator - bank stress typically precedes builder demand deterioration by 60-90 days.
Compressing Builder Margins - Deterioration Underway
Gross margins below 20% and declining; cancellations above 25%; net orders negative YoY; incentive costs above 6% of ASP; spec inventory accumulating
Signal MetricDHIPHMTOLStatus
Gross Margin<20%<21%<23%Alert
Cancellation Rate>25%>20%>18%Elevated
Net Orders YoY<0%<0%<0%Declining
Incentive Cost / ASP>6%>6%>5%High
Backlog Value<3 mo<3 mo<6 moThin
Hedge Response: Full ITB Put Deployment + REZ Short
ITB Puts (Full - 3-5% OTM, 6-month)REZ Short (Partial - Demand Contagion)KRE Short (Full)
Multiple red signals trigger immediate full hedge deployment on the builder segment. ITB puts at 3-5% OTM with 6-month expiration - if the builder segment falls 30-40%, deeply in-the-money puts deliver 25-35% gross return on notional. REZ short (partial) is added because builder demand collapse historically foreshadows apartment rent softening by 6-12 months. KRE full short addresses the banking system stress component of a builder downturn.
Micro Dashboard 4 of 5

Forestar Group (FOR) - Entitlement Pipeline & Land Bank Risk

FOR - Healthy Entitlement Pipeline & Active Lot Deliveries
FOR delivering 12,000-18,000 lots annually to DHI and third parties; entitlement pipeline 3-5 years visibility; land bank value growing; takedown pace on schedule
Lot Delivery Volume
On Track
FOR delivers finished and semi-finished lots to DHI (75%+ of deliveries) and third-party builders. At healthy delivery pace of 14,000+ lots/year, FOR generates consistent revenue and lot profit margins of 12-16%.
Land Bank Value
Appreciating
Entitled land appreciates as home prices rise and competitor lot supply remains constrained. FOR's 70,000+ lot pipeline represents multi-year value visibility. Land-to-lot conversion margin expansion as home price appreciation exceeds land carry costs.
DHI Relationship
Stable - ~75% Controlled
DHI's 75%+ ownership provides strategic stability and guaranteed takedown commitments. ACM's dual exposure to both DHI (builder) and FOR (land) represents an integrated residential production chain - a natural structural advantage.
Hedge Posture: None - FOR Natural Hedge via DHI Exposure
No FOR-Specific Hedges
ACM's dual DHI/FOR exposure creates a natural internal hedge: if DHI slows takedowns, DHI's own financials are affected by the same demand decline that stresses FOR - both positions move together. Individual FOR hedging would double-count the builder exposure already hedged through ITB puts. FOR-specific risk only arises if the DHI relationship deteriorates or entitlement problems are idiosyncratic to FOR's land bank.
FOR - Entitlement Delays & Lot Delivery Shortfalls
Permitting backlogs in key markets; municipal infrastructure capacity constraints; environmental review delays; takedown schedule pushed 6-18 months
Lot Delivery Volume
Below Target: -15-30%
Entitlement delays push lot delivery volume below the 12,000-lot floor needed for efficient operations. Revenue recognition defers. Working capital tied up in unentitled land earning below-market returns.
Land Carry Costs
Rising - Margin Pressure
Interest carry on unentitled land bank at current rates is approximately $40-60 million annually. Delays extend carry period, compressing lot profit margins. If delays exceed 18 months, some land positions may be reassessed for disposition at or below cost.
DHI Takedown Risk
Secondary - DHI Self-Sourcing
If FOR cannot deliver lots on schedule, DHI may increase direct land acquisition to maintain community count. This creates competitive tension and may force FOR to reduce lot pricing to retain DHI volume - negative for FOR margins.
Hedge Response: ITB Puts (Proxy) or DHI Direct Monitoring
ITB Puts (Proxy - FOR Options Illiquid)DHI Short (Direct - If DHI Relationship Breaks)
FOR's options market is too illiquid for direct puts - bid-ask spreads make direct hedging cost-prohibitive. ITB puts serve as the proxy hedge for entitlement delay risk, as the ITB ETF includes FOR in its holdings. DHI short is evaluated only if the FOR-DHI relationship visibly deteriorates. ACM monitors FOR lot delivery guidance quarterly and compares against announced community count targets.
FOR - Land Impairment Risk & Book Value Writedown
Home price declines in key FOR markets; land values falling below cost basis; option lot abandonments accelerating; impairment charges probable
Land Impairment
Book Value at Risk
FOR carries land on its balance sheet at cost. If fair value falls below cost, GAAP requires impairment charges that directly reduce book value and net income. A 15% home price decline in Phoenix, Austin, or Charlotte could trigger $50-150 million in impairment charges.
Option Walk Rate
Forfeiture Losses
FOR uses land options to control lots with limited capital. In a downturn, walking away from options (forfeiting deposits) may be preferable to completing purchases at above-market prices. Option forfeiture write-offs directly reduce earnings.
FOR Stock Impact
-30% to -60%
Land impairments compress FOR's price-to-book multiple dramatically. FOR typically trades at 1.0-1.5x book; impairment risk can compress this to 0.5-0.7x. In a severe housing downturn, FOR equity could underperform even DHI, PHM, and TOL on a relative basis.
Hedge Response: ITB Puts + DHI Short Evaluation (Correlated Hedge)
ITB Puts (Full - Primary FOR Proxy)DHI Short (Correlated - Internalizes FOR Risk)CS-HPI Futures (Direct Home Price Hedge)
Land impairment risk is the scenario where DHI short becomes most relevant - DHI owns 75%+ of FOR, so DHI equity implicitly reflects FOR's land impairment. A DHI short captures the FOR impairment risk directly without FOR option liquidity constraints. ITB puts cover the broader builder/land segment. Case-Shiller HPI futures are deployed as the most direct hedge against the national home price decline that triggers FOR impairments.
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Leveraged Instrument Mechanics - TBT, TMF, VMBS Margin, MBB

TBT & TMF - Daily Rebalancing Leveraged ETF Mechanics
Understanding 2x and 3x daily reset structure, compounding effects, and optimal holding period selection for ACM's rate hedging instruments
TBT Structure
2x Daily Inverse 20+ yr
TBT delivers 2x the daily inverse return of ICE U.S. Treasury 20+ Year Bond Index. It resets daily - not a buy-and-hold instrument. In a sustained, low-volatility rate rise (2022 analog), TBT outperforms the simple 2x inverse of cumulative move due to compounding.
TMF Structure
3x Daily Long 20+ yr
TMF delivers 3x the daily return of the ICE U.S. Treasury 20+ Year Bond Index. In sustained, low-volatility Treasury rallies (2008, 2019 cut cycles), TMF significantly outperforms the simple 3x of cumulative return. Highly efficient in trending markets.
Volatility Drag Risk
High in Choppy Markets
In flat or oscillating rate environments, daily rebalancing creates negative compounding (volatility drag). Both TBT and TMF erode in sideways markets even if the underlying index returns zero. ACM limits holding periods to confirmed trending environments only.
ACM TBT / TMF Deployment Rules
Max holding period: 90 days without re-evaluationExit if rate move reverses 50bps from trigger levelTMF requires recession probability >40% + inverted curve + Fed cut signal
Position sizing: TBT is sized to offset VMBS effective duration risk - not modified duration. At VMBS effective duration of ~5.5 years and VMBS weight of 33.33%, a 1.5% NAV TBT position provides approximately 3.3% of rate move offset per 100bps 20-year yield increase. TMF entry criteria: All three conditions required simultaneously: (a) recession probability exceeds 40%, (b) 2-10 year yield curve inverted for more than 90 days, and (c) Fed has signaled at least one cut in the forward dot plot. Exit discipline: No averaging into losing leveraged ETF positions - the daily reset structure makes this extremely capital-destructive.
VMBS Margin Leverage - Agency MBS Carry Enhancement
Deploying broker margin against the VMBS position to enhance income; target leverage range 1.10-1.25x; carry positive only when VMBS yield exceeds margin borrowing rate
Carry Economics
Positive When VMBS > Margin Rate
VMBS current yield: ~4.0-4.8%. Typical margin borrowing rate (SOFR + 25bps): ~4.5-5.5% in current environment. Positive carry only when VMBS yield exceeds margin cost. Deploy only with confirmed rate decline trajectory.
Agency Credit Advantage
Implicit Gov. Guarantee
Unlike corporate bond leverage strategies, VMBS margin leverage carries zero credit default risk. The implicit U.S. government guarantee means margin borrowing against VMBS is collateralized by de facto sovereign credit. Maximum 1.25x maintains comfortable margin maintenance buffer.
Rate Risk Amplification
Duration Risk x1.2
At 1.2x leverage, a 100bps rate move causing VMBS to fall 6% results in a 7.2% loss on the leveraged position - plus margin interest cost. Rate risk is amplified proportionally to leverage. ACM constrains margin to rate-declining environments only.
VMBS Margin Deployment Conditions & Risk Controls
Carry positive requirement: VMBS yield > broker call rate by 25bps minimumMaximum leverage: 1.25xOnly deployed in flat-to-declining rate environments
Carry positive requirement: VMBS yield must exceed current broker call rate by minimum 25bps after all costs. If carry turns negative, leverage is immediately reduced to 1.0x. Maximum leverage: 1.25x - providing 17% cushion against margin maintenance requirement. At 1.25x leverage, VMBS must fall 20%+ before a margin call is triggered - extremely unlikely given agency guarantee. Income impact: At 1.2x leverage with 50bps positive carry, VMBS margin leverage adds approximately 35bps of annualized income to the total fund.
Volatility Decay & Leveraged ETF Rebalancing Risk
Understanding how daily reset compounding creates path dependency and erosion in TBT, TMF, and any leveraged instrument
Daily Reset Compounding
Path-Dependent Loss
Example: 10-year yield rises 1%, falls 1%. Net change = 0. TBT Day 1 gain: +2%. Day 2: -2% of the now-higher base. Net TBT return: -0.04%. Over 30 days of oscillation, this compounds into meaningful erosion even with zero net rate change.
Decay Quantification
~15-30% Annualized (Volatile)
In a high-volatility, mean-reverting rate environment (plus or minus 50bps annual oscillation around a stable level), TBT and TMF can lose 15-30% annualized simply from volatility drag even if the underlying index returns zero.
Trending Market Advantage
Outperforms in Trends
In strongly trending markets - 2022 rate spike (TBT), 2008 Treasury rally (TMF) - daily compounding works in favor of the leveraged position. The 2022 TBT returned ~67% vs. a simple 2x Treasury move of ~48% - compounding added ~19% excess return.
ACM Leveraged Instrument Risk Management Protocol
Trend confirmation: 2 of 3 indicators required before deploymentDecay monitoring: auto-review if cumulative decay exceeds 5% of positionMonthly reset review: reduce 50% if thesis unconfirmed in prior 30 days
Trend confirmation requirement: TBT and TMF are only deployed when at least two of the following three trend indicators are simultaneously positive: (1) 10-year yield above/below its 20-day moving average by more than 20bps, (2) Fed communication clearly directional (hawkish/dovish), (3) CPI/PCE trend confirmed through two consecutive prints in same direction. Maximum single-instrument allocation: TBT: 1.5% NAV. TMF: 0.75% NAV. MBB calls: 0.5% NAV. These hard caps are maintained regardless of conviction level.

Tactical Hedges as Alpha Generators — Historical & Prospective Scenarios

ACM’s hedging instruments serve a dual purpose that fundamentally distinguishes this fund from conventional long-only residential real estate strategies. They protect the portfolio during downturns — but in macro and micro environments where the direction of travel is reasonably foreseeable well in advance, the hedging instruments themselves become primary sources of alpha, generating returns that exceed the cost of the hedge and contribute positively to absolute performance. The following case studies demonstrate how each major historical and prospective scenario creates an identifiable alpha opportunity for a fund with ACM’s toolkit.

The critical insight underlying this entire framework is that macro cycle transitions rarely arrive without warning. The Federal Reserve does not raise rates 500 basis points without months of public communication. Housing permits do not collapse without prior affordability data deteriorating visibly for quarters. Regional banks do not stress without credit spread widening appearing first in the KRE/SPY relative performance spread. ACM’s three-tier trigger system is specifically designed to identify these transitions early — deploying instruments at Tier 1 when protection is cheap and alpha potential is high, rather than at Tier 3 when the crisis is priced in and the opportunity is largely exhausted.

Three Environments Where the ACM Toolkit Generates Alpha

2006–2009
The Housing Crisis — The Foreseeable Collapse of Subprime Credit
The most consequential housing event in modern history — and one of the most extensively telegraphed

The 2007–2009 housing and financial crisis is often described as a black swan — an unforeseeable catastrophe. The historical record does not support this characterization. The warning signals began accumulating as early as 2005 and 2006, years before the most acute phase of the crisis. Subprime mortgage delinquency rates began rising in late 2006 as the first wave of adjustable-rate mortgages reset. Non-agency MBS spreads began widening in early 2007, reflecting the market’s growing recognition of credit deterioration. New home sales peaked in 2005 and were declining sharply by 2006. The ABX subprime index — a credit default swap index on subprime mortgage bonds — began pricing significant distress in early 2007, more than 18 months before the Lehman Brothers collapse in September 2008. Regional bank stocks (KRE) began significantly underperforming the broader S&P 500 by mid-2007 as construction loan exposure and subprime holdings became visible liabilities.

For an ACM-style portfolio, the 2006–2008 setup would have triggered Tier 1 watch signals across multiple indicators simultaneously: KRE dramatically underperforming SPY, housing permit data collapsing from cycle highs, and credit spreads on housing-related instruments widening visibly. The Tier 2 and Tier 3 deployments would have followed a progression across 18 to 24 months rather than a single overnight event.

Alpha-Generating Deployments
ITB Puts
Builder Equity Collapse

D.R. Horton fell 65%, PulteGroup fell 72%, Toll Brothers fell 68% from their 2005 peaks to 2009 troughs. ITB put options initiated in 2007 as permit data collapsed — with 6-month expirations rolled forward — would have generated extraordinary returns through this 3-year decline. The builder segment gave 18+ months of warning before the most acute losses materialized.

KRE Short
Regional Bank Stress Leading Indicator

Regional bank stocks began reflecting construction loan and HELOC losses beginning in mid-2007 — more than a year before the peak of the systemic crisis. A KRE short initiated when KRE began its divergence from SPY (Tier 1 trigger) would have generated significant gains through 2008 as regional bank failures accelerated, while simultaneously serving as an early warning signal for full Tier 3 deployment.

REZ Short
Residential REIT NOI Collapse

Residential REITs fell 38–52% from peak to trough during 2008–2009 as vacancy rates spiked, NOI collapsed, and dividend cuts became widespread. The apartment and single-family rental markets deteriorated as unemployment surged and household formation collapsed. A REZ short initiated as occupancy metrics began deteriorating in 2007–2008 — well before the equity market peak — would have converted REIT segment losses into a net positive contribution.

TMF
Flight-to-Quality Treasury Rally

The 10-year Treasury yield fell from approximately 5.25% in mid-2006 to a trough of approximately 2.05% in late 2008 — a 320 basis point decline that produced extraordinary price appreciation in long-duration Treasuries. TMF, deployed as recession probability exceeded 40% and the yield curve inverted in 2006–2007, would have delivered 3x leveraged participation in this multi-year Treasury rally, generating substantial alpha as equity positions declined.

CS-HPI Futures
Direct Home Price Alpha

The S&P/Case-Shiller National Home Price Index peaked in Q2 2006 and ultimately fell approximately 27% nationally by Q1 2012 — with some metropolitan areas like Phoenix, Las Vegas, and Miami falling 50%+. A short Case-Shiller HPI futures position initiated in 2007 as price appreciation decelerated and permit data collapsed would have been the purest possible expression of the housing bear thesis, generating direct alpha proportional to the home price decline.

2020
COVID-19 — A Genuine Shock, but a Recoverable One with Defined Asymmetry
The initial shock was unforeseeable — but the Federal Reserve’s response and its implications for the ACM portfolio were immediate and unambiguous

The COVID-19 pandemic is the clearest example of a genuine exogenous shock in the post-crisis era — its initial outbreak and the March 2020 market dislocation were not foreseeable through ACM’s standard monitoring framework. The ACM portfolio would have experienced the initial drawdown along with the broader market. However, COVID illustrates a different and equally important dimension of the ACM alpha framework: the recovery and policy response were foreseeable within days of the initial shock, and the instruments available to ACM were ideally positioned to capture the resulting dynamics.

By March 16, 2020 — one week after the WHO declared a pandemic — the Federal Reserve had cut rates to zero, announced unlimited quantitative easing including direct agency MBS purchases, and signaled an extended period of emergency monetary accommodation. The implications were immediate: Treasury yields would fall sharply (TMF opportunity), agency MBS spreads would tighten as the Fed became the buyer of last resort (VMBS margin opportunity, MBB calls), and the residential real estate market would bifurcate sharply between apartment REITs (damaged by urban vacancy) and suburban single-family demand (accelerated). Additionally, the builder segment would experience an extraordinary demand surge as households fled cities for suburban homes with more space — a trend that was clearly visible by Q2 2020 and continued through 2022.

Alpha-Generating Deployments
TMF
Flight-to-Quality Treasury Rally — March 2020

The 10-year Treasury yield fell from approximately 1.90% in January 2020 to a historic low of approximately 0.54% by early August 2020 — a 136 basis point collapse in under 8 months. For TMF, a 3x leveraged long-Treasury instrument, this move in a relatively low-volatility downward direction produced substantial compounded gains. The Fed’s March 2020 rate cut to zero and QE announcement satisfied all three TMF deployment criteria simultaneously: recession probability exceeded 40%, the yield curve had inverted in 2019, and the Fed had cut aggressively. A TMF position initiated in the immediate aftermath of the initial shock would have generated significant alpha through the Treasury rally.

VMBS Margin + MBB Calls
Fed QE as VMBS Yield Enhancement Catalyst

The Federal Reserve’s decision to purchase agency MBS directly — ultimately acquiring over $1.4 trillion in agency MBS during 2020 — created a guaranteed bid for VMBS at tightening spread levels. By April 2020, agency MBS spreads had tightened dramatically as the Fed dominated the market. This created the ideal VMBS margin leverage environment: spreads tight, carry strongly positive, Fed credibly backstopping the asset class. VMBS margin leverage at 1.20–1.25x deployed in April 2020 and maintained through 2021 would have generated substantial additional carry income as the Fed’s QE suppressed MBS yields and eliminated credit risk effectively.

REZ Short (Selective)
Urban Apartment REIT Stress — COVID Displacement

The COVID pandemic drove one of the sharpest divergences in residential real estate history. Urban apartment REITs (EQR’s coastal gateway markets) suffered severe vacancy increases as young professionals fled cities, rent concessions became standard, and occupancy fell to multi-year lows. EQR fell approximately 36% from its pre-COVID peak to its late-2020 trough. A selective REZ short — sized to hedge the apartment REIT exposure specifically — initiated as urban vacancy data deteriorated through Q2-Q3 2020 would have converted the REIT segment’s urban displacement losses into net-positive contributions.

ITB Puts Closed / Builders Long
Suburban Demand Surge — The Anti-Hedge

COVID demonstrates an equally important application of ACM’s tactical framework: knowing when NOT to hedge, and recognizing when macro conditions are asymmetrically positive. By Q2 2020, the suburban housing demand surge was visible in real-time data — mortgage applications for purchase (not refinance) were rising sharply, new home traffic was recovering, and DHI/PHM were reporting better-than-expected order trends. Any ITB puts deployed in the initial shock period should have been closed by mid-2020 as the demand signal became clear. ACM’s builder segment (DHI, PHM, TOL, FOR) returned 49%, 53%, 43%, and 56% respectively in 2020 — the single best year for the builder allocation in the fund’s inception history.

2022
The 2022 Federal Reserve Rate Hike Cycle — The Most Telegraphed Tightening in Decades
Inflation at 40-year highs, Fed communication fully transparent — the policy direction was not a surprise to anyone paying attention

By January 2022, the signals for aggressive Federal Reserve tightening were unambiguous. CPI had reached 7.0% year-over-year — a 40-year high. The Fed had already signaled the end of quantitative easing and the beginning of rate increases. The 10-year Treasury yield had already risen from 1.50% in December 2021 to over 1.80% by mid-January. For an ACM portfolio manager monitoring its Tier 1 indicators, every rate-related trigger was flashing simultaneously: the 10-year was moving more than 75 basis points in a 60-day window, and the implications for each of the three fund segments were direct and quantifiable. This was not a prediction — it was reading the Fed’s own published communications.

The 2022 cycle delivered the worst fixed income returns in approximately 40 years. The Bloomberg U.S. Aggregate Bond Index fell 13%, its worst year since at least 1976. VMBS fell 11.75%. Residential REITs fell 32%. Homebuilder equities were mixed — early cycle saw demand resilience as buyers rushed to lock in rates, but late cycle saw cancellation rates spike as affordability collapsed. The ACM toolkit turned each of these outcomes into an alpha opportunity.

Alpha-Generating Deployments
TBT
2x Short Treasury — ~67% Return in 2022

TBT returned approximately 67% in calendar year 2022 as the 20+ year Treasury Index fell roughly 32% and the 2x leverage compounding amplified the directional move. A 1.5% NAV TBT allocation generated approximately 100 basis points of positive return — directly offsetting the 11.75% VMBS decline on the 33.33% VMBS allocation, which contributed approximately 390 basis points of fund-level loss. TBT converted a guaranteed MBS duration loss into a net-zero outcome on the segment.

REZ Short
Residential REIT Proxy Short — 32% Decline Captured

Residential REITs fell approximately 32% in 2022 as rising cap rates compressed valuations and higher financing costs pressured FFO growth. A REZ short position initiated at Tier 1 trigger — when the 10-year Treasury first moved through 2.5% in early 2022, signaling material cap rate pressure ahead — would have captured a large portion of this decline, converting a 32% loss on 33.33% of fund assets (approximately 1,066 basis points of fund-level drag) into a net-positive contribution.

ITB Puts
Builder Segment Late-Cycle Protection

The builder story in 2022 had two distinct phases. Early 2022 saw demand strength as buyers rushed to purchase before rates rose further — a genuine tailwind for DHI and PHM. ITB puts were not warranted in this phase. By mid-2022, cancellation rates began spiking (D.R. Horton reported cancellation rates exceeding 30%), affordability was severely impaired, and builder forward guidance began deteriorating sharply. ITB puts initiated at this inflection point — a clear Tier 2 trigger — provided meaningful late-cycle protection as builder equities declined 15–30% from their 2022 peaks.

TBT + REZ Short
Combined Overlay: Converting a -20% Year into Positive Alpha

The combined effect of TBT and REZ short on a 2022 ACM portfolio would have been transformative. Without the hedging overlay, a 33.33% VMBS position falling 11.75% and a 33.33% REIT position falling 32% would have contributed approximately 460 basis points of combined losses even before accounting for the builder segment. With TBT and REZ short generating gains, those same rate and REIT dynamics become net contributors — illustrating precisely how a foreseeable macro environment converts from an unmitigated loss into an alpha opportunity.

Forward-Looking Environments With Identifiable Alpha Setups

The following scenarios are not predictions — they are structured analyses of how ACM’s toolkit would respond to environments that are well-defined in advance and whose early-warning signals are actively monitored. When these signals activate, the deployment framework is pre-established and execution is systematic rather than reactive.

Macro
Fed Rate-Cut Cycle Initiation — Confirmed Easing
Rate cuts confirmed via Fed dot plot; inflation at target; yield curve normalizing

A confirmed Federal Reserve rate-cut cycle is one of the most powerful and well-telegraphed alpha environments for the ACM portfolio. Rate cuts unfold over months or years of public Fed communication before the first cut occurs — the dot plot, FOMC minutes, and Chair press conferences collectively provide months of advance warning. The deployment sequence is systematic: TMF is initiated as the yield curve normalizes and recession probability exceeds 40%, capturing 3x leveraged Treasury price appreciation as rates fall. MBB calls are opened on any confirmed cut signal, providing leveraged participation in agency MBS price appreciation beyond the passive VMBS allocation. VMBS margin leverage at 1.20x is deployed as carry turns demonstrably positive — adding approximately 35 basis points of annualized income to the fund. REZ short is closed and the full REIT allocation runs unhedged as falling cap rates drive REIT multiple expansion. ITB puts are closed and builder equities benefit from the affordability relief. In the 2019 rate-cut cycle, REITs rallied 31% and homebuilders rallied 80%+.

TMF (3x Treasury Long)MBB Calls (Full Size)VMBS Margin (1.20x)
Macro
GSE Reform / Fannie & Freddie Privatization Risk
Legislative momentum building to exit conservatorship without explicit guarantee replacement

GSE reform represents one of the most material structural risks to the VMBS position — and one that has appeared on the legislative calendar repeatedly since 2011. The risk is not binary or sudden: congressional hearings, CBO scoring, committee markups, and bill sponsorship lists provide months of advance warning before any reform legislation reaches the floor. ACM monitors GSE legislative activity in real-time. When bill momentum crosses a defined probability threshold, the response is a structured VMBS rotation: partial reduction of the VMBS position into short-duration Treasuries or T-bills to reduce agency credit risk, combined with ITB puts to hedge the builder demand collapse that would accompany higher conforming mortgage rates (a 100-200 basis point conforming rate increase would severely impair affordability and builder demand). A KRE short is added as the regional banking system — which holds significant agency MBS on balance sheet — would face mark-to-market losses on its MBS portfolios if spreads widened on implicit guarantee removal.

VMBS Rotation (Partial)ITB Puts (Builder Demand)KRE Short
Micro
Builder Margin Compression Cycle — Cancellation Rate Spike
Gross margins declining below 22%, cancellation rates rising above 18%, incentive costs expanding

Builder margin compression cycles are among the most observable and data-rich micro environments ACM monitors. Quarterly earnings reports from DHI, PHM, and TOL provide explicit gross margin guidance, cancellation rate data, and backlog values. Monthly Census Bureau new home sales and housing starts provide inter-quarter data points. The pattern of margin compression is identifiable well before it reaches crisis levels: gross margins typically peak, then decline for 2-4 consecutive quarters before cancellation rates spike. ACM’s builder margin signal table monitors five metrics simultaneously across all three names. When two or more metrics flash amber across two or more builders simultaneously, Tier 2 deployment is triggered: ITB puts at 8-10% OTM are initiated with 6-month expirations. If a third quarterly report confirms continued deterioration, the position moves to Tier 3: ITB puts at 3-5% OTM are the primary hedge, a partial REZ short is added (builder demand collapse historically precedes apartment rent softening by 6-12 months), and a full KRE short is deployed as regional bank construction loan exposure becomes a liability.

ITB Puts (5-8% OTM → 3-5% OTM)REZ Short (Partial)KRE Short (Full)
Micro
MBS Spread Tightening Cycle — VMBS Yield Enhancement
Agency MBS OAS below 25bps; Fed QE active or signaled; strong institutional demand

Tight MBS spread environments are not just neutral — they are positive alpha environments for ACM’s MBS toolkit. When the option-adjusted spread on agency MBS falls below 25 basis points, two instruments become simultaneously attractive: MBB call options and VMBS margin leverage. MBB calls at this spread level are inexpensive relative to the potential upside if spreads tighten further or rates fall — a 1-3% OTM call with a 2-3 month expiration costs relatively little in premium while providing leveraged participation in further MBS appreciation. VMBS margin leverage at 1.15-1.20x generates positive carry when VMBS yield exceeds margin borrowing cost, which is reliably the case in QE environments where the Fed is actively suppressing MBS yields and buying agency paper. Combined, these two instruments can add 75-125 basis points of annualized return to the MBS segment in favorable spread environments — purely through the yield enhancement and leverage overlay on an already agency-guaranteed asset base.

MBB Calls (1-3% OTM)VMBS Margin (1.15-1.20x)
Macro
Stagflation — Sticky Inflation With Economic Slowdown
CPI above 4%, GDP growth below 1%, unemployment rising, housing starts declining

Stagflation is one of the most challenging environments for a balanced portfolio because the standard defensive playbooks conflict: rate hedges (TBT) fight inflation, but a weakening economy also pressures equities. For the ACM portfolio, stagflation creates a nuanced but identifiable playbook. VMBS suffers on rates (TBT deployed), but the yield carry remains attractive. REITs are under pressure from both higher cap rates and rising vacancy as job growth weakens (REZ short at Tier 2 size). Builders are the most acutely impaired: construction cost inflation compresses gross margins from above while demand destruction from affordability collapse compresses them from below (ITB puts are the primary instrument). The stagflation scenario is distinguished from a simple recession by the absence of flight-to-quality Treasury rallies — rates remain elevated or rising even as growth slows, making TMF inappropriate. The primary alpha generators in stagflation are TBT (duration hedge on sticky rates), REZ short (NOI deterioration), and ITB puts (margin and demand collapse). The KRE short is added as regional banks face rising credit losses on construction and developer loans while their own funding costs increase with short-term rates.

TBT (Rate Hedge)ITB Puts (Primary)REZ Short (Tier 2)KRE Short
Macro
Mortgage Lock-In Effect Unwinding — Rate Normalization
Mortgage rates declining toward 5.5-6%, existing inventory unlocking, new home market share eroding

The mortgage lock-in effect — where 60%+ of existing mortgages are locked below 4% — has been one of the most powerful structural tailwinds for ACM’s builder and land segment since 2022. DHI, PHM, TOL, and FOR have benefited from new construction being the primary available housing supply as existing homeowners declined to list. This environment is not permanent, and its unwinding is highly telegraphable: mortgage rate normalization toward 5.5-6% will gradually unlock existing inventory as the economic cost of moving declines. The process will unfold over 12-24 months and will be visible in the monthly existing home inventory data, months of supply statistics, and builder net order trends well before it reaches crisis levels for the builder segment. The alpha opportunity is in positioning for the transition: as existing inventory unlocks and new home market share erodes, ITB puts become attractive at the margin. The flip side is equally important — VMBS prepayment speeds will accelerate as the lock-in cohort begins refinancing, shortening VMBS effective duration and creating a window for MBB call options to capture the price appreciation on the remaining long-duration pool. The REIT segment bifurcates: multifamily loses rental demand as buyers can finally purchase, while SUI (manufactured housing) remains largely unaffected.

ITB Puts (Evaluate)MBB Calls (Rate Decline)REZ Short (Selective — EQR/MAA)
⚠  Not FDIC Insured
△  May Lose Value
⚠  No Bank Guarantee
Important Disclosures & Disclaimers

The ACM Residential Real Estate Fund (REF) is a simulated model portfolio and does not represent an actual investment fund. All hedging scenarios, instrument payoffs, and portfolio impact estimates shown are hypothetical illustrations only and do not represent actual hedges that have been or are currently deployed.

The tactical hedging instruments described involve significant risks including but not limited to: leveraged ETF volatility decay, short squeeze risk, option premium loss, margin call risk, liquidity risk in thinly traded instruments, and counterparty risk in OTC derivatives. Leveraged and inverse ETFs are not designed for buy-and-hold investing and may perform very differently from their stated daily leverage multiple over holding periods exceeding one trading day.

Past performance is not indicative of future results. This material is for educational and informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice, an offer, or solicitation to buy or sell any securities.

Adkins Capital Management LLC. All rights reserved. ACM model portfolio managed by Troy Morris Adkins II.