Factor rebalancing superior for managing liquidity

Factor rebalancing a portfolio is a better way to manage liquidity and leverage implications of illiquid assets compared to traditional rebalancing to a static asset allocation, according to new research presented at the Fiduciary Investors Symposium in Singapore.

A research paper, (Re)Balancing Act: The interplay of private and public assets in dialing the asset allocation, published in the Journal of Portfolio Management in April, proposes a new way to rebalance portfolios that more deliberately considers a more stable risk and leverage profile of a portfolio.

Co-author Redouane Elkamhi (pictured), Professor of Finance at the Rotman School at the University of Toronto, who presented the research in Singapore, said this approach allows investors to rebalance to the same underlying exposures – such as growth, inflation, and real rates – without being forced to rebalance to the fixed allocations.

“Generally, we think if you have come back to the SAA and rebalance, that is an active decision at each point in time that that is the best portfolio you can hold,” he said. “Coming back to that starting point is a big call. We need to be more dynamic in the face of uncertainty and the framework we have worked under for a long time.”

The factor rebalancing approach focuses on addressing a number of problems when it comes to rebalancing illiquid assets. For example, during market downturns, private assets can become significantly overweight due to stale valuations and the depreciation of public assets.

And standard rebalancing strategies can unintentionally introduce leverage due to the illiquid nature and potential stale valuation and lead to a deterioration of the fund’s liquidity position.

Sponsored Content

“You can’t easily rebalance illiquid assets, but the way people deal with that is by leverage, which means an unintended active decision that has implications on value-add,” Elkamhi said.

“This is a plumbing issue – a serious issue in asset management. As the privates get bigger it creates liquidity and leverage problems.”

Liquidity and leverage

The paper demonstrates how liquidity and leverage changes with a traditional rebalancing approach and using factor rebalancing which is designed to help the portfolio achieve more stable profiles in terms of leverage, risk, and liquidity.

This is done by considering public assets as complements to the illiquid private assets and making adjustments to the allocations of public assets to maintain the desired factor allocation for the overall portfolio.

Elkamhi said the approach gives investors a framework that allows a portfolio to be tilted without unintended active decisions.

Elkamhi said the paper was not a view on the optimal allocation to private versus public assets but a tool to rebalance to desired allocations without the unintended impacts on leverage among other things.

“If you have constraints to come back to the fixed allocations this is giving you a degree of freedom to give you a better liquidity coverage ratio and to better deal with privates in the portfolio,” Elkamhi said.

“We are not advocating for more privates but if that is the aim our methodology allows you to have more private without effecting the liquidity coverage ratio (LCR) level the same way traditional rebalancing will do, with a huge magnitude.

Redouane Elkamhi is part of the faculty of the University of Toronto and will speak at the Fiduciary Investors Symposium on campus from May 29-31. For information click here.

Leave a Comment

What a brief encounter with Elon Musk taught me about the limits of capitalism

What a brief encounter with Elon Musk taught me about the limits of capitalism

In 2013, on the sidelines of the Milken Conference at the Beverly Hilton, my friend and then-colleague Sean Scallan and I found ourselves in a seven-minute private conversation with Elon Musk.   He was not yet the figure he is today. Tesla was struggling. SpaceX had launched but not yet proven itself. The idea of humans

Sort content by

Why China could trigger a Taiwan crisis without firing a shot

Former US deputy national security adviser Matt Pottinger has warned that China could spark “a very serious crisis” in Taiwan without even resorting to a full-scale war – an escalation he said could occur within the current Trump administration. 

Wisdom: The jewel in the dirt-pile of intelligence

In his regular column for Top1000funds.com, Tim Hodgson, co-founder of the Thinking Ahead Institute at WTW, reflects on the dangers of unconstrained action, the limits of efficiency, and why long-term sustainability may depend on knowing when not to act.

When states lose the ability to govern, populism rises

Stephen Kotkin, global geopolitical expert and Stanford academic, has warned that there is an “increasing governability challenge in high-income democracies” where government departments face declining capacity to perform core functions due to complex regulatory systems and bureaucratic tasks. 

Inside NBIM’s AI playbook to hone investment edge

Norges Bank is a lean organisation despite managing a $2.2 trillion portfolio. Across the fund’s four global offices, there are only 700 staff, or $3 billion per person, which is why it has made pursuing AI-driven efficiency a core organisation initiative – and a non-negotiable requirement for its employees. 

Investors unpack regime-based portfolio thinking 

Funds are operating in an extraordinary environment, with Scott Chan, chief investment officer of CalSTRS, saying he has never witnessed so many “large shifts stacked on top of the other” in his investment career. Amid the change, investors are increasingly shifting to a scenario and regime-based asset allocation.  

AI investors face post-Moore’s Law reality

Mark Horowitz, a leading computer scientist and electrical engineer at Stanford University, has declared that Moore’s Law is “basically over”, which will have significant ramifications for artificial intelligence investors who are counting on more computing power to feed into more complex models.  

Previous