Topic 05 Asset Allocation
Topic 05 Asset Allocation
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TOPIC 5: QUESTIONS
• If you only care about the risk and return of your investments, how much
should you invest in each asset?
• How does your strategy depend on the correlation between two assets?
• Does adding new assets to your portfolio improve your risk-return tradeoff?
• How sensitive is the tangency portfolio to the inputs (E,σ, ρ)?
• How do we determine the inputs in practice?
• Did Harvard make money because it was smart or patient?
• How did Harvard’s endowment evolve over time? Why?
• If you are smart, should you still be diversified?
• Should you change the proportion between bonds and stocks as you get
older?
• Should you short your own company?
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1. ASSET ALLOCATION and MODERN
PORTFOLIO THEORY (MPT)
ASSET ALLOCATION AND MPT
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MPT – TWO-STEP SOLUTION
We are given a set of financial assets and must decide how to allocate our
investment capital among them
For example, we might have to find the optimal portfolio from a
universe of stocks and bonds
Two-step solution
STEP A: Find the set of all feasible (possible) portfolios
• Called the Investment Opportunity Set (the IO Set)
STEP B: Find the optimal portfolio in the IO Set
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PORTFOLIOS
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PORTFOLIOS
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2. INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITY (IO) SET
1 RISK-FREE + 1 RISKY ASSET
Example: You have a 1-year horizon, and consider splitting your money between
two assets
An index of stocks, the Standard & Poor 500 (call it X)
A risk-free asset, a 1-year T-Bill (call it rf)
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1 RISK-FREE + 1 RISKY ASSET
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IO SET: CAPITAL ALLOCATION LINE (CAL)
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SHARPE RATIO
An application of: “The higher the risk, the higher the reward”
For the S&P 500 (as for any P on CAL) the Sharpe ratio is
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TWO RISKY ASSETS
Example: You have a 1-year horizon, and consider splitting your money between
two assets
An index of stocks, e.g., S&P 500 (call it A)
An index of bonds, e.g., Lehman Index (call it B)
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IO SET: TWO RISKY ASSETS
The IO Set in the (E,σ)-plot is now a hyperbola
P has lower risk than both stocks and bonds + higher expected return than bonds
This is an example of diversification
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IO SET and CORRELATION
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IO SET and CORRELATION
When ρ = 0.5, 0, or – 0.5 the plot shows some of the hedging effect, though not
as much as when ρ = – 1
This is an example of diversification: combining assets in a portfolio may
reduce the overall risk!
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MANY RISKY ASSETS
In the case with more than 2 risky assets, the IO Set is a hyperbola together with all
the portfolios to the right of the hyperbola
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MANY RISKY ASSETS – INPUTS
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IO SET: MANY RISKY ASSETS
Plot the IO Set and the 11 asset classes
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ADDING NEW RISKY ASSETS
What happens when you introduce a new asset to the existing IO set?
The IO set becomes bigger!
• Unless the new asset is redundant, i.e., it is a linear combination of
existing assets
And what happens to the efficient frontier when we introduce a new risky asset?
It moves to the left
Now we can achieve the same expected return, but have lower risk
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IO SET: REMOVING RISKY ASSETS
Plot the IO set for the Harvard MC, if they invest only in the first 5 or 10 assets
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1 RISK-FREE + MANY RISKY ASSETs
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FINDING THE TANGENCY PORTFOLIO
Covariance matrix:
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FINDING THE TANGENCY PORTFOLIO
The equation is
The solution is
You should invest 58% of your risky money in stocks (A) and 42% in bonds (B)
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3. OPTIMAL PORTFOLIOS
OPTIMAL PORTFOLIOS and RISK AVERSION
STEP B: Determine the optimal portfolio. This can be done in several ways:
Determine your target risk σ
Determine your target expected return
• E.g., Harvard has a target E of 6.25%
Determine your risk aversion
• This is based on your trade-off between E and σ
• It is usually done with a utility function, e.g., quadratic utility
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THE OPTIMAL PORTFOLIO
STEP A The optimal portfolio P must be on the efficient frontier. If we can invest
in a risk-free asset, the efficient frontier is the CML (the line between rf and T)
Let w = fraction invested in T (risky assets), 1 – w in the risk-free asset. Then:
Observations:
More risk averse investors (with higher A) invest less in the risky asset
No matter how risk averse an investor is, he should still invest at least a small
fraction in the tangency portfolio (the risky assets)!
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THE OPTIMAL PORTFOLIO
Example: You have quadratic utility function with coefficient A = 7. You must
choose a portfolio of a risk-free T-bill and the tangency portfolio T
Suppose the tangency portfolio T has 58% stocks and 42% bonds
You should invest 75% in the tangency portfolio, and 25% in the T-bill
Should have 75% x 58% = 43.5% in stocks, and 75% x 42% = 31.5% in bonds.
Optimal portfolio: 43.5% (stocks) + 31.5% (bonds) + 25% (T-bill)
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4. PRACTICAL ISSUES IN ASSET ALLOCATION
C. Practical Issues – Estimation
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INPUT ESTIMATION
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RETURN PREDICTABILITY
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SMART INVESTORS + VIEWS
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5. CASE STUDY: Harvard Management Company
HARVARD’S ENDOWMENT
Problem: How to allocate Harvard’s endowment of $18.2 billion and get high
returns while keeping risk reasonably low
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HMC: POLICY PORTFOLIO
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POLICY PORTFOLIO: EVOLUTION (2000)
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HMC: MPT ASSUMPTIONS
HMC invests in 11 asset classes + cash. They use Modern Portfolio Theory
(MPT), using as inputs the real expected returns, standard deviations, and
correlations (in %/year):
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EFFICIENT FRONTIER: 12 ASSETS, CONSTRAINED
NO SHORT SELLING (EXCEPT CASH)
MPT with no-shorting constraints (except -50% cash): 22 portfolios along the efficient frontier
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EFFICIENT FRONTIER: 12 ASSETS, CONSTRAINED
NEAR POLICY PORTFOLIO
MPT with constraints near the Policy Portfolio: 8 portfolios along the efficient frontier
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HMC: LONG-SHORT POSITIONS
Examples of Long-Short Positions
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HMC: LONG-SHORT POSITIONS
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HMC: PORTFOLIO STRESS TESTS
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HMC: ENDOWMENT PERFORMANCE (2000)
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HMC: ENDOWMENT PERFORMANCE (2009)
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IN CRISES CORRELATIONS GO UP!
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POLICY PORTFOLIO: EVOLUTION (2014)
Policy Portfolio, updated 2014
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CASE UPDATE: Harvard Management Company
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6. OTHER TOPICS
INTERNATIONAL ASSET ALLOCATION
There is a home bias puzzle: e.g., the U.S. stock market accounts for about a half of
world stock market, but over 90% of U.S. equity wealth is invested in U.S. stocks!
It could be due to superior information about home stocks, but cannot be
the whole story
In the long run, should not hedge: long-run exchange rates are driven by inflation,
and stocks are a good hedge against inflation
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LIFE-CYCLE INVESTING
When doing your analysis, use real returns to account for inflation!
The more your labor income is correlated to the market, the more you should diminish your
holdings of stocks
If you were a finance professor, should you short banks?
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TOPIC 5: QUESTIONS
• If you only care about the risk and return of your investments, how much
should you invest in each asset?
• How does your strategy depend on the correlation between two assets?
• Does adding new assets to your portfolio improve your risk-return tradeoff?
• How sensitive is the tangency portfolio to the inputs (E,σ, ρ)?
• How do we determine the inputs in practice?
• Did Harvard make money because it was smart or patient?
• How did Harvard’s endowment evolve over time? Why?
• If you are smart, should you still be diversified?
• Should you change the proportion between bonds and stocks as you get
older?
• Should you short your own company?
5-53