Scenario analysis: applicable to anything?

Attempts to apply a formula to asset allocation based on an asset’s historical volatility and relationship with other assets tend to fail when presented with black-swan events. Equities tend to rise along with commodities except when presented with political events such as the price hikes in oil in 1973 that sent equities into free fall. Similarly, the quantitative easing measures in Europe, the US and Japan have also created a stimulus that makes equities and bonds move in ways that are not entirely logical. Furthermore, the lack of a fully reliable model for creating asset allocation has led investors to rely on common sense and, also for reasons of comfort, following allocations that are similar to like-minded investors.

This has not stopped some investors trying to create models that try and do better than this status quo.

The fund manager Blackstone has been using scenario analysis to help make sense of what its clients’ alternative asset allocations should be by using 18 market scenarios to predict the fortunes of individual asset classes. The model looks at the standard variance of asset classes and their interrelationships, but also takes into account a host of topical political and economic themes.

Ian Morris (pictured right), the New York-based managing director of Blackstone’s hedge fund solutions operation who has helped build a team of political, economic and market-based analysts to create these scenarios, believes that the model could reveal where institutional investors are not taking enough risk to achieve their stated aims or where they are taking too much risk. Unknown

The best system going

Each scenario, which reflects market fears, hopes and expectations, is weighted according to how likely it is to happen, and all add up to 100 per cent.

In the most recent model, the scenarios include the likelihood of a heavy double-dip US recession, which is rated a 2-per-cent probability, a light double-dip recession rated at 7 per cent, a “deflationary slog” at 10 per cent, “quantitative easing proves effective” at 13 per cent and its most popular forecast, moderate growth, is scored at a probability of 16 per cent. Each month the scores of the scenarios are updated and multiple implications for the return on each asset class are calculated.

Sponsored Content

Morris does not expect the analysis to be completely accurate, but says it is the best system he is aware of.

“I don’t think anyone has found the holy grail of asset allocation, but this approach works for us. We have put a lot of resources into political, economic and market research so that we can make the forecasts and do valuations. Not everyone has this resource – we think it is fairly unique,” he says. Adding that is relevant to any asset: “It’s applicable to anything that moves.”

Morris explains what the analysis looks like in practice. “In a heavy double-dip recession, Australian private equity might fall 62 per cent, but in a very bullish scenario it might rise 65 per cent. There are some scenarios in which equities and bonds do badly, or where equities rise and bonds fall.”

Model to measure

Blackstone takes the process further by personalising asset allocation recommendations to each investor’s risk tolerances. These are expressed in a line chart that shows, for example, for some investors a loss of 5 per cent might be twice as painful for a risk-averse investor than for a risk seeker.

“For those with an appetite for risk, a 10-per-cent return is twice as good as a 5-per-cent return, and a 10-per-cent loss is twice as bad as a 5-per-cent loss. But for risk-averse investors, a 10-per-cent loss would be more than twice as bad as a 5-per-cent loss.”

“For a very risk-averse conservative investor, it will recognise that you feel the pain of the downside much more than a risk-loving investor and, as a result, it constrains asset allocation,” explains Morris. “It can be absolute return for a given risk-aversion level. For a risk-loving investor, it will produce what it thinks is the highest returning maximising-utility portfolio allocation to generate a high-octane return.”

The idea is that after using the model investors might find that they need to re-jig their asset allocation, as either they are being too cautious in asset classes that could do well according to the analysis or they have too-large an allocation to an asset class exposed to the risks of large falls. The analysis can show this by giving the expected portfolio returns of specific asset allocations.

The analysis, though, is not always as simple as increasing risky assets and decreasing safer assets, say, for a fund that finds it is not taking enough risk to achieve its 7-per-cent return target.

“The fund might hold a risky asset even if it is expected to maybe not do so well in difficult environments. If there are other asset classes that are offsetting that, it could give big gains for that risk-averse investor,” says Morris.

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

Siguler: buy good quality companies

As the world and companies globalise, George Siguler, managing director and founding partner of private equity firm, Siguler Guff, has a simple recommendation for investors. “My recommendation for stock investors is to look at great global companies,” he says. “Look at companies like Johnson and Johnson, Unilever or Boeing. They all have great balance sheets

A series of shorts
don’t make a long

It is easy for long-term investors to avoid short termism, and the solution lies in avoiding momentum and conducting risk analysis using cash flows – not market pricing. “Diversification is a joke. Diversification and risk analysis relies on pricing, but pricing is distorted because it’s driven by momentum,” says Paul Woolley, chairman of the Paul

ShareAction mainstreams responsible investment

“ShareAction has become the premier organisation to give voice to those who wish to invest their values as well as their assets,” enthused former vice president of the United States Al Gore, speaking to a packed audience at ShareAction’s annual lecture in London’s Guildhall last week. ShareAction is only a tiny pressure group but Gore’s

Cass creates principles
for DC model

As almost every market in the world looks to move from defined benefit to some sort of defined contribution model, academics at the Pensions Institute of the Cass Business School, City University London have developed a set of 15 principles for designing a defined contribution model. The principles, consistent with the recently published OECD guidelines, are based

Pension funds reject EU financial transaction tax

When the European Commission announced plans on February 14 to introduce a Financial Transaction Tax (FTT) by the start of 2014, it planted a bomb under Europe’s pension funds. That is not, of course, the view of Algirdas Šemeta (pictured below right), the EU’s commissioner for taxation. He says the proposed tax is “unquestionably fair

Ugo Bassi focuses on transparency at ICGN

For many people their most memorable in situ news moment is when man landed on the moon or when John Lennon, Princess Diana or Michael Jackson died. But most Italians will remember where they were when Pope Benedict XVI resigned. A country with record unemployment, no head of state and no head of the church

Previous