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Explore a groundbreaking approach to determining when to rebalance institutional portfolios amidst market fluctuations. Learn how an optimal rebalancing strategy can enhance market competitiveness and reduce trading costs. Delve into utility functions, certainty equivalents, dynamic programming, and efficient frontiers. Discover simulation results and cost-effective strategies for maintaining balance amid changing asset proportions.
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Optimal Rebalancing Strategy for Institutional PortfoliosWalter SunJoint work with Ayres Fan, Li-Wei Chen,Tom Schouwenaars, Marius Albota, Ed Freyfogle, Josh GroverQWAFAFEW - Boston MeetingApril 12, 2005
Problem Summary • Managers create portfolios comprised of various assets & asset classes • The market fluctuates, asset proportions shift • Given that there are transaction costs, when should portfolio managers rebalance their portfolios? • Most managers currently re-adjust either on: • a calendar basis (once a week, month, year) • when one asset strays from optimal (+/- 5%) Both of these methods are arbitrary and suboptimal.
Why is this problem important? • An optimal rebalancing strategy would give a firm a measurable advantage in the marketplace • Optimal rebalancing can reduce the amount of trading The ‘correct’ strategy can reduce costs.
Presentation Outline • Simple Example • Our Solution • Two Asset Model • Multi-Asset Model • Sensitivity Analysis • Conclusion • Future Research
Example • On Aug. 15, 2004, a portfolio was equal-weighted between the Nasdaq 100 ETF (QQQQ) and a long-term bond fund (PFGAX). • On Nov. 15, 2004, the portfolio is no longer equal-weighted, as QQQQ (red) has gained 16.5% while PFGAX (blue) has increased 2%; so QQQQ now represents 53% of the portfolio.
Example • Your portfolio is now unbalanced. • Should you rebalance now, or should you have rebalanced earlier? • How much should it depend on your exact trading costs (40bps, 60bps, or flat fee)? When and how to optimally rebalance is complicated. Transaction costs make it much more difficult.
Our Solution • In theory, the decision rule is simple: Rebalance when the costs of being suboptimal exceed the transaction costs • In practice the transaction cost is known (assuming no price impact), but the cost of suboptimality is not.
When to rebalance depends on three costs: • Cost of trading • Cost of not being optimal this period • Expected future costs of our current actions The cost of not being optimal (now and in the future) depends on your utility function
Utility Functions • Quantify risk preference • Assume three possible utilities
Certainty Equivalents • Given a risky portfolio of assets, there exists a risk-free return rCE (certainty equivalent) that the investor will be indifferent to. • Example: 50% US Equity & 50% Fixed-Income ~ 5% risk-free annually • Quantifies sub-optimality in dollar amounts • Example: Given a $10 billion portfolio. • The optimal portfolio xopt is equivalent to 50 bps per month • A sub-optimal portfolio xsub is equivalent to 48 bps per month • On this portfolio, that difference amounts to $2 million per month
J2(r2) – expected benefit at time 2, given roll of r2 r3 • J2(r2) = max( r2, E(J3(r3)) ) = max( r2, 3.5 ) Roll r2 Roll • J1(r1) = max( r1, E(J2(r2)) ) r1 Accept if r2>3.5 Accept if r1>E(J2(r2)) Dynamic Programming - Example • Given up to three rolls of a fair six-sided die • Payout is $100 (result of your final roll) • Find optimal strategy to maximize expected payout Solution • Work backwards to determine optimal policy
Current period tracking error Cost of Trading Expected future tracking error Dynamic Programming • Examine costs rather than benefit • Jt(wt) is the “cost-to-go” at time t given portfolio wt • Trade to wt+1 (optimal policy) • When wt+1 = wt, no trading occurs
Assumed normal returns Data and Assumptions • Given annual returns for 5 asset classes & table of means/variances* • Used 5 asset model due to • computational complexity • optimal portfolio with non-trivial weights in each asset class *Correlation matrix displayed in our paper
Optimal Portfolios • Calculated efficient frontier from means and covariances • Performed mean-variance optimization to find the optimal portfolio on efficient frontier for each utility
Two Asset Model • Demonstrate method first on simple two asset model • US Equity 7.06%, Private Equity 14.13% (2% risk-free bond) • 10 year (120 period) simulation
Multi-Asset Model • The optimal weights of the 5 asset classes for quadratic utility were: 19.4% US Equity, 22.2% Developed Mkt, 18.5% Emerging Mkt, 15.6% Private Equity, 24.3% Hedge Funds • Ran 10,000 iteration Monte Carlo simulation over 10 year period for all three utility functions [result of quadratic utility shown below] Quadratic Utility
Simulation Results • On average, with a $10 BN portfolio, our strategy will… • Give up $700 K in expected risk-adjusted return • Save $3.5 MM in transaction costs Netting $2.8 MM in savings!!!
QQQQ PFGAX Possibilities for Further Analysis • Variable transaction cost functions • Different utility functions • Varying assumptions that could be challenged • Tax implications • Time to rebalance > 0 • Impact of short sales • Mean-reverting returns
Conclusions • Portfolio rebalancing theory is quite basic…rebalance when the benefits exceed the transaction costs • However, the calculation proves quite difficult • The more assets involved, the harder it is to solve • Our DP method outperformed all other methods across several utility functions Use dynamic programming to save money
Acknowledgements:Sebastien Page, State Street Mark Kritzman, Windham Capital Managementfor helpful and insightful comments (work initiating from a project for a course in the MIT Sloan School taught by Mark Kritzman).