Growing case for low-volatility portfolios

RogersCasey has leant its weight to the trend towards low-volatilty portfolios, however, in a white paper on the subject, the asset consultancy notes a few concerns.

The paper, written by Arman Gevorgyan, is broadly supportive of pension funds considering low-volatility portfolios in a range of conditions. Such portfolios, managed either actively or passively, can free up a significant portion of a fund’s risk budget for other uses.

The main advantages, according to RogersCasey, are:

. potentially attractive risk/reward trade-off

. operationally straightforward implementation and monitoring, and

. attractive fee schedule (especially for passive) and liquidity profile relative to alternative investments.

Sponsored Content

But low-volatility portfolios do not necessarily have to be considered ‘alternative’. The paper points out they can be used for a traditional equity program and as a LDI (liability driven investment) solution as well as a part of the alternatives allocation.

On the cautionary side, the paper notes that it is uncertain as to precisely why low-volatility stocks have offered the risk and return characteristics they appear to have. It could be because of a style bias – favouring small caps and value stocks – or because of the sub-optimal nature of traditional cap-weighted indices which are used as comparisons.

Gevorgyan notes, also, that with benchmarking becoming commonplace, most pension funds shifted their risk focus from total, or absolute, risk to active, or comparative, risk. This may create another inefficiency to exploit.

And, he says, there is a certain “glamour appeal” about volatility, which is a possible psychological bias, for those investors who are often seeking to hit home runs within their portfolios.

The major disadvantages of low-volatility portfolios, the paper says, are:

. lack of clarity whether their historical Sharpe (risk/return) ratios will persist

. increase in program-level active risk as a result of implementing low-volatility portfolios, and

. difficulty in benchmarking.

Nevertheless, the paper follows a discussion paper on global equities published by Mercer Investment Consulting last month, in which that firm also recommended consideration of low-volatility portfolios as a better defensive mechanism than other traditional forms.

The full RogersCasey white paper is accessible on: www.rogerscasey.com

Leave a Comment

GIC, Temasek eye trillions of growth in climate adaptation market

GIC, Temasek eye trillions of growth in climate adaptation market

Singapore’s two largest asset owners, GIC and Temasek, see attractive opportunities in climate adaptation solutions – a relatively underfunded area compared to decarbonisation. The former has already made selective adaptation investments and said the opportunity set across public and private debt and equity could increase to $9 trillion by 2050.

Sort content by

Derivatives in emerging markets

This article by Dubravko Mihaljek and Frank Packer from the Bank for International Settlements,  reviews the derivatives market in emerging market economies, attempting to answer some basic questions such as how big the market is, who trades, which derivatives are most traded and how it differs from mature markets.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Options to improve the governance and investment of Japan’s Government Pension Investment Fund

This OECD paper suggests avenues for strengthening the governance and management of the Japanese Government Pension Investment Fund (GPIF), the largest single pool of pension assets in the world. It says the governance stucture falls short of international best practice and in some cases does not meet some of the basic criteria contained in OECD

Determinants of Sovereign Wealth Fund investment in private equity

This paper examines the investment patterns of 50 Sovereign Wealth Funds in 903 public and private firms over the period 1984-2009, and specifically the determinants of a SWF’s weight of direct private equity in their overall portfolio. The paper finds evidence that SWFs are more likely to invest in private firms in countries that have

How do hedge funds manage portfolio risk?

Gavin Cassar from The Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania, and Joseph Gerakos at the Booth School of Business, University of Chicago, investigate the determinants and effectiveness of methods that hedge funds use to manage portfolio risk. They find that levered funds are more likely to use formal models to evaluate portfolio risk.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored

Private equity in the 21st century

This detailed research looks at cross-sectional and time-series cash flow performance of  a large sample of private equity funds across a range of asset classes, and examines the relationship with the management contracts of those funds. It concludes, among other things, that there is some evidence that funds with lower GP capital commitments outperform.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored

Real estate or infrastructure? Evidence from conditional asset allocation

This study by Tobias Dechant and Konrad Finkenzeller from the University of Rengensberg’s BS Institute of Real Estate, reassesses the role of real estate in the asset allocation processs, by considering a wide range of alternative and/or seemingly related assets, paying particular attention to infrastructure. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Previous