Advancements in Portfolio Theory

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ADVANCEMENTS IN PORTFOLIO THEORY Xiaoyang Zhuang Economics 201FS Duke University March 30, 2010

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Advancements in Portfolio Theory. Xiaoyang Zhuang Economics 201FS Duke University March 30, 2010. Contents. Fleming, Kirby, Ostdiek (2003) with our own data A review of their methodology Original results using high-frequency U.S. equities Future Directions. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Advancements in Portfolio Theory

Page 1: Advancements in Portfolio Theory

ADVANCEMENTS IN PORTFOLIO THEORY

Xiaoyang ZhuangEconomics 201FSDuke UniversityMarch 30, 2010

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Contents

1. Fleming, Kirby, Ostdiek (2003) with our own dataA review of their methodologyOriginal results using high-frequency U.S. equities

2. Future Directions

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SETTING

min(α) σ2 = αΣtα subject to αTe = 1, αT = P

•Risk-averse investor within a “conditional” mean-variance framework•Four asset classes: stocks, bonds, gold, and cash•Daily rebalancing•Allocation is implemented using futures on the risky assets (makes analysis robust to transaction costs and trading restrictions)

CONCLUSION

Given the daily estimator, an investor would be willing to pay 50-200 bps/year to upgrade to the 5-minute RV/RCov estimator.

Fleming, Kirby, and Ostdiek (2003, JFE)The Economic Value of Volatility Timing Using “Realized” Volatility

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ESTIMATORS

•Covariance Using Daily Returns.

where Ωt-k is a symmetric N x N matrix of weights, and et-k = (Rt-k – ) is an N x 1 vector of daily return innovations. The weights are exponential.Certain choices of Ωt-k causes the estimate to resemble the estimate generated by a multivariate GARCH model.

•Covariance Using 5-Minute Returns. Realized Covariance.

•Returns. According to the authors, assuming a constant returns vector is empirically sound.

Fleming, Kirby, and Ostdiek (2003, JFE)The Economic Value of Volatility Timing Using “Realized” Volatility

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MEASURING PERFORMANCE GAINS

•Quadratic Utility Approach

•Each day, the investor places some fixed amount of wealth W0 into cash (6%(!!!) risk-free rate assumed) and purchases futures contracts with the same notional value. Her daily utility is

where Rpt is the portfolio‘s return (on day t), γ is the investor’s RRA, and Rf is the risk-free rate.

•Define Rp1t and Rp2t as the portfolio’s return using high- and low-frequency estimators, respectively, in making the allocation decision. The (daily) performance gain from using high-frequency estimators is then ∆, such that

Fleming, Kirby, and Ostdiek (2003, JFE)The Economic Value of Volatility Timing Using “Realized” Volatility

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MEASURING PERFORMANCE GAINS

•Quadratic Utility Approach

•Each day, the investor places some fixed amount of wealth W0 into cash (6%(!!!) risk-free rate assumed) and purchases futures contracts with the same notional value. Her daily utility is

where Rpt is the portfolio‘s return (on day t), γ is the investor’s RRA, and Rf is the risk-free rate.

•Define Rp1t and Rp2t as the portfolio’s return using high- and low-frequency estimators, respectively, in making the allocation decision. The (daily) performance gain from using high-frequency estimators is then ∆, such that

Fleming, Kirby, and Ostdiek (2003, JFE)The Economic Value of Volatility Timing Using “Realized” Volatility

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FKO With Our Own Data

MEASURING PERFORMANCE GAINS

•Five stocks: Alcoa (AA), DuPont (DD), Ford (F), JPMorgan Chase (JPM), Wal-Mart (WMT)•Target return: 5%

•Lags for the rolling estimator = 5•Decay rates for rolling estimator: [0.030 (daily) 0.060 (RV)]

•Risk-free rate = 6% (as per FKO)•γ = 10

(1)

(2)

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Benefits of High-Frequency Data

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Benefits of High-Frequency Data

STATISTICS: WHOLE PERIOD (%)

mean(PerfGain) = 14.6057median(PerfGain) = 14.6566std(PerfGain) = 3.4371range(PerfGain) = [-22.7854 76.2392]

STATISTICS: 9/1/2008 – 12/25/2008 (%)

mean(PerfGain) = 15.1245median(PerfGain) = 15.2262std(PerfGain) = 8.6467range(PerfGain) = [-22.7854 44.4357]

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Short-Selling

STATISTICS: RV ESTIMATOR (%)

mean(sum(α)) = 31.51median(sum(α)) = 31.27std(sum(α)) = 7.81range(sum(α)) = [6.89 68.69]

STATISTICS: GARCH-Y ESTIMATOR (%)

mean(sum(α)) = 23.59median(sum(α)) = 23.32std(sum(α)) = 109.46range(sum(α)) = [-2623.40 1078.70]

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Short-Selling

STATISTICS: RV ESTIMATOR (%)

mean(sum(α)) = 31.51median(sum(α)) = 31.27std(sum(α)) = 7.81range(sum(α)) = [6.89 68.69]

STATISTICS: GARCH-Y ESTIMATOR (%)

mean(sum(α)) = 23.59median(sum(α)) = 23.32std(sum(α)) = 109.46range(sum(α)) = [-2623.40 1078.70]

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What accounts for the different leverage recommendations between the GARCH-y and multivariate RV measures?

What accounts for the unpredictable performance differences between GARCH-y and multivariate RV measures in periods of market stress?Compare with Extreme Value Estimators?

How clueless are fund of fund managers?Are there any benefits of “volatility timing” for fund of fund managers who know the asset class, but not the individual assets, that their fund managers are investing in?

Questions Moving ForwardOn Portfolio Optimization: How and When Do We Benefit From High-Frequency Data?