--- title: "Getting AI To Fall In Line" description: "Barron's recently profiled the iShares Systematic Alternatives Active ETF (IALT), which employs three strategies: market neutral, dynamic macro, and long only, aiming for 7-9% volatility. The performa" type: "news" locale: "en" url: "https://longbridge.com/en/news/275959582.md" published_at: "2026-02-14T01:57:33.000Z" --- # Getting AI To Fall In Line > Barron's recently profiled the iShares Systematic Alternatives Active ETF (IALT), which employs three strategies: market neutral, dynamic macro, and long only, aiming for 7-9% volatility. The performance of the Blackrock Global Equity Market Neutral Fund (BDMIX) has been notable, with Copilot suggesting that its recent success is due to improved market conditions. The article discusses the risks associated with various strategies and emphasizes the importance of questioning AI outputs for better decision-making in portfolio management. *Image Source: Unsplash* Barron's had a **short profile** on the recently listed iShares Systematic Alternatives Active ETF (IALT), which is similar compare to the longer tenured Blackrock Global Equity Market Neutral Fund (BDMIX), same managers running a slightly different strategy. IALT is running three strategies: one is market neutral, the second is a "dynamic" macro strategy, and the third is long only. The three will be combined such that the volatility will be in the 7-9% range. You can see the comparison. The idea with Portfolio 4 is that HFGM leverages up, so I wanted to get a little closer to apples to apples with IALT. Portfolio 5 is a build-it-yourself version (maybe), but the volatility is way too high at 14% unless... ...you go further back, subbing in QGMIX for the newer HFGM. Portfolio 4 tries to tamp down the volatility to be closer to BDMIX (cousin of IALT). The performance of BDMIX is suspicious, trading flat and then turning up so markedly. Copilot said it was not a change in strategy; the fund started to do better because the various factors and markets it tracks began to do better, so it is a function of patience paying off. The blend of momentum, macro, and market neutral from Portfolios 2 and 3 in the longer backtest looks pretty good over the longer period, but it differentiates from VBAIX by quite a bit. The extent to which that is a good thing versus a challenging thing is a toss-up. In 2019, VBAIX outperformed by 850 basis points, while in 2021, it outperformed by 700 basis points. That gets made up for, and then some, along the way, but a point we've made before is that differentiation can be difficult emotionally, which is worth remembering before building something that gets too far away from plain vanilla. Copilot likes the blend of those three funds; it notes the biggest risk would be some sort of event that simultaneously hurts risk assets like SPMO, "cross asset macro signals" impacting QGMIX, and what it calls deal flow for ARBIX, but when I said that ARBIX is more of a relative value strategy, Copilot softened up on that point. It said the biggest thing lacking from the portfolio was convexity, which to me sounds like the client personally holding BTAL. It didn't love BTAL, ranking it third best after managed futures and funds like SWAN, which is mostly treasuries with long call options. SWAN should go down less than equities but get a kicker from the calls when equities rise. BTAL helps with SPMO but wouldn't protect against things going wrong with QGMIX and/or ARBIX. Copilot then laid out ten macro strategies to stress test the portfolio, but I am not confident it did it correctly. It included examples from 2017, 2018/19, and 2022 that could be bad for the portfolio, but it did well in all of them. I pushed back on that, and it rationalized that it was more of what could have gone wrong but didn't. This post has a couple of instances where AI gave an output that didn't quite seem to be correct. I've been asked questions about how to use AI, and part of my opinion is that it is important to question outputs. It will go back and rethink answers, which makes for more productive work. SPMO, QGMIX, and ARBIX are all in my ownership universe. * * * *More By This Author:* Insanity And Stability All In One Blog Post Accessing & Harnessing Sophisticated Strategies "Braking News," Gold & Silver Markets Are Broken ### Related Stocks - [BLK.US - BlackRock](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/BLK.US.md) - [IALT.US - iShares Systematic Alternatives Actv ETF](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/IALT.US.md) ## Related News & Research | Title | Description | URL | |-------|-------------|-----| | Alberta Investment Management Corp Makes New $4.55 Million Investment in BlackRock $BLK | Alberta Investment Management Corp has made a new investment of approximately $4.55 million in BlackRock (NYSE: BLK), ac | [Link](https://longbridge.com/en/news/276426679.md) | | How BlackRock, world's largest asset manager, is fine-tuning market portfolios for 2026 | BlackRock, the world's largest asset manager, is refining its investment strategy for 2026, focusing on artificial intel | [Link](https://longbridge.com/en/news/272155977.md) | | Why Nice stock is soaring today | Nice's fourth-quarter results showed that AI may be more of a tailwind than a disruption for the company. | [Link](https://longbridge.com/en/news/276367051.md) | | Coforge Limited Advances EvolveOps.AI: Agentic AI-Powered IT Operations Platform for Mission Zero Resiliency from Edge to Cloud | Coforge Limited has announced advancements in EvolveOps.AI, an AI-powered IT operations management platform designed for | [Link](https://longbridge.com/en/news/276379288.md) | | Fed’s Daly says policy ‘in a good place’ as officials assess AI’s effect on economy | San Francisco Federal Reserve President Mary Daly said that monetary policy is “in a good place” and that officials at t | [Link](https://longbridge.com/en/news/276397900.md) | --- > **Disclaimer**: This article is for reference only and does not constitute any investment advice.