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Empirical Financial Economics

Empirical Financial Economics. Current Approaches to Performance Measurement. Overview of lecture. Standard approaches Theoretical foundation Practical implementation Relation to style analysis Gaming performance metrics. Performance measurement.

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Empirical Financial Economics

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  1. Empirical Financial Economics Current Approaches to Performance Measurement

  2. Overview of lecture • Standard approaches • Theoretical foundation • Practical implementation • Relation to style analysis • Gaming performance metrics

  3. Performance measurement Style: Index Arbitrage, 100% in cash at close of trading

  4. Frequency distribution of monthly returns

  5. Universe Comparisons 40% Brownian Management 35% S&P 500 30% 25% 20% 15% 10% 5% 1 Year 3 Years 5 Years One Quarter Periods ending Dec 31 2002

  6. Total Return comparison Average Return A B C D

  7. Total Return comparison Average Return A Manager A best RS&P = 13.68% S&P 500 B C Manager D worst D rf = 1.08% Treasury Bills

  8. Total Return comparison Average Return A B C D

  9. Sharpe ratio comparison Average Return A B C D Standard Deviation

  10. Sharpe ratio comparison Average Return A RS&P = 13.68% S&P 500 B C D rf = 1.08% Treasury Bills Standard Deviation ^ σS&P = 20.0%

  11. Sharpe ratio comparison Average Return A RS&P = 13.68% S&P 500 B C Manager C worst Sharpe ratio = D Manager D best Average return – rf Standard Deviation rf = 1.08% Treasury Bills Standard Deviation ^ σS&P = 20.0%

  12. Sharpe ratio comparison Average Return A RS&P = 13.68% S&P 500 B C D rf = 1.08% Treasury Bills Standard Deviation ^ σS&P = 20.0%

  13. Treynor Measure comparison A Average Return RS&P = 13.68% S&P 500 B C D rf = 1.08% Treasury Bills Beta βS&P = 1.0

  14. Treynor Measure comparison A Average Return RS&P = 13.68% S&P 500 B Manager B worst C Manager C best Treynor measure = D Average return – rfBeta rf = 1.08% Treasury Bills Beta βS&P = 1.0

  15. Jensen’s Alpha comparison Average Return A RS&P = 13.68% S&P 500 B Manager B worst C Manager C best Jensen’s alpha = D Average return – {rf + β (RS&P - rf )} rf = 1.08% Treasury Bills Beta βS&P = 1.0

  16. Intertemporal equilibrium model • Multiperiod problem: • First order conditions: • Stochastic discount factor interpretation: • “stochastic discount factor”, “pricing kernel”

  17. Value of Private Information • Investor has access to information • Value of is given by where and are returns on optimal portfolios given and • Under CAPM (Chen & Knez 1996) • Jensen’s alpha measures value of private information • Other pricing kernels:

  18. The geometry of mean variance Note: returns are in excess of the risk free rate

  19. Informed portfolio strategy • Excess return on informed strategy where is the return on an optimal orthogonal portfolio (MacKinlay 1995) • Sharpe ratio squared of informed strategy • Assumes well diversified portfolios

  20. Informed portfolio strategy • Excess return on informed strategy where is the return on an optimal orthogonal portfolio (MacKinlay 1995) • Sharpe ratio squared of informed strategy • Assumes well diversified portfolios Used in tests of mean variance efficiency of benchmark

  21. Practical issues • Sharpe ratio sensitive to diversification, but invariant to leverage • Risk premium and standard deviation proportionate to fraction of investment financed by borrowing • Jensen’s alpha invariant to diversification, but sensitive to leverage • In a complete market impliesthrough borrowing (Goetzmann et al 2002)

  22. Changes in Information Set • How do we measure alpha when information set is not constant? • Rolling regression, use subperiods to estimate (not subscript) – Sharpe (1992) • Use macroeconomic variable controls – Ferson and Schadt(1996) • Use GSC procedure – Brown and Goetzmann (1997)

  23. Style management is crucial … Economist, July 16, 1995 But who determines styles?

  24. Characteristics-based Styles • Traditional approach … • are changing characteristics (PER, Price/Book) • are returns to characteristics • Style benchmarks are given by

  25. Returns-based Styles • Sharpe (1992) approach … • are a dynamic portfolio strategy • are benchmark portfolio returns • Style benchmarks are given by

  26. Returns-based Styles • GSC (1997) approach … • vary through time but are fixed for style • Allocate funds to styles directly using • Style benchmarks are given by

  27. Basis Assets • GSC (1997) approach … • vary through time but fixed for risk class • Allocate equities to risk classes directly using • Style benchmarks are given by Brown, Stephen J. and William N. Goetzmann, 1997 Mutual Fund Styles. Journal of Financial Economics 43:3, 373-399.

  28. Switching Regression • Quandt (1958) • If regimes not observed

  29. K means procedure • Hartigan (1975) • If regimes not observed, use iterative algorithm to determine regime membership

  30. Switching Regression • Quandt and Ramsey (1978) • Method of moments ...

  31. Eight style decomposition

  32. Five style decomposition

  33. Style classifications

  34. Regressing returns on classifications: Adjusted R2

  35. “Informationless” investing

  36. Analytic Optioned Our fund purchases a stock and simultaneously sells a call option against the stock. By doing this, the fund receives both dividend income from the stock and a cash premium from the sale of the option. This strategy is designed for the longer term investor who wants to reduce risk. It is particularly suited for pension plans IRAs and Keoghs. Our defensive buy/write strategy is designed to put greater emphasis on risk reduction by focusing on “in-the-money” call options. The results speak for themselves. Over a twelve year period, of 153 institutional portfolios in the Frank Russell Co. universe, no other portfolio had a higher return with less risk than our All Buy/Write Accounts Index. In the terminology of modern portfolio theory, our clients’ portfolios dominated the market averages.

  37. Modern Portfolio Theory

  38. Covered Call Strategy Value Stock Profit to Covered Call Payoff to Covered Call

  39. Unoptioned Portfolio Return Expected Return Portfolio Return

  40. Optioned Return Expected Return Portfolio Return

  41. Optioned Return (incl. premium) Expected Return Portfolio Return

  42. Concave payout strategies • Zero net investment overlay strategy (Weisman 2002) • Uses only public information • Designed to yield Sharpe ratio greater than benchmark • Using strategies that are concave to benchmark

  43. Concave payout strategies • Zero net investment overlay strategy (Weisman 2002) • Uses only public information • Designed to yield Sharpe ratio greater than benchmark • Using strategies that are concave to benchmark • Why should we care? • Sharpe ratio obviously inappropriate here • But is metric of choice of hedge funds and derivatives traders Goetzmann, William N., Ingersoll, Jonathan E., Spiegel, Matthew I. and Welch, Ivo, 2007 Portfolio Performance Manipulation and Manipulation-proof Performance Measures, Review of Financial Studies 20(5) 1503-1546.

  44. Sharpe Ratio of Benchmark Sharpe ratio = .631

  45. Maximum Sharpe Ratio Sharpe ratio = .748

  46. Short Volatility Strategy Sharpe ratio = .743

  47. Concave trading strategies

  48. Examples of concave payout strategies • Long-term asset mix guidelines

  49. Examples of concave payout strategies • Unhedged short volatility • Writing out of the money calls and puts

  50. Examples of concave payout strategies • Loss averse trading • a.k.a. “Doubling”

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