The pitfalls of risk modelling

Many portfolio managers use multi-factor models, but these are only as good as the various inputs used to construct them.

MSCI looks at how flawed-model construction can result in optimised portfolios that are not efficient.

The paper, Is Your Risk Model Letting Your Optimized Portfolio Down?, reveals that faulty risk models tend to underestimate risk in times of increasing market volatility and to overestimate risk when market volatility is falling.

MSCI finds that this can still occur despite models having both the correct underlying risk factors and an accurate process for estimating risk.

This can occur through sampling errors due to a limited history of returns, and a misalignment that arises from discrepancies between risk and alpha factors.

Portfolio managers’ alphas are often based on asset characteristics that are similar, but not identical to, those used to form risk factors.

Sponsored Content

A portfolio manager attempting to use an optimising model might tend to emphasise the part of the alpha that is not shared by the risk factors ­– also known as the residual alpha – because the risk model believes that part has no systematic risk. This might create bets in the portfolio that the manager did not intend to take.

MSCI proposes a number of solutions to these problems.

To read the paper, click here.

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

The complex science of integrating impact into portfolio design

Incorporating impact into a risk/return framework creates additional dimensionality and significantly increasing the complexity of the portfolio design challenge. David Bell from The Conexus Institute explores the technical challenge of navigating the 3-D investment framework.

Kotkin: The risks of investing in China; Ukraine’s battle ahead

Stephen Kotkin, the John P Birkelund Professor in History and International Affairs, Princeton University, cites the many risks of investing in China.

Net zero alignment: Assign portfolio managers strict carbon budgets

A new paper outlines how investors can align their portfolio to science-based carbon budgets consistent with 1.5 degrees of warming.

The five characteristics of a future portfolio: CAIA

The traditional 60/40 portfolio allocation is no longer enough. The opportunity for alpha is not gone, but the low-hanging fruit has long been harvested, and the path toward higher absolute returns has gotten far more nuanced according to a new report from the Chartered Alternative Investment Analyst (CAIA)

Limited talent pool hits diversity

Asset owners increasingly encourage their asset managers to improve diversity, but both owners and managers report the need to grow diverse talent coming into the investment industry, according to recent research.

Finance model says Biden will win

Joe Biden will win the US election according to a technique used in finance to predict factor returns and the correlation of stock and bond returns. The technique, outlined in an MIT working paper, correctly predicted the past five elections, including 2016.

Previous