The hidden risks of risk parity portfolios

The benefits of risk parity portfolios are largely an illusion and contain hidden risks such as confusing volatility with risk and including asset classes that have significant negative skew, which combined with leverage could be painful for investors, according to director of asset allocation at GMO, Ben Inker.

In a recent GMO paper, that in part responds to the recent spate of positive papers on the risk parity approach, Inker says by shifting to risk parity portfolios now, investors run the risk of loading up on fixed income duration after the best run for bonds in history, a run that has left government bonds, in the opinion of GMO, looking extremely dangerously overpriced.

“But apart from the tactical question of whether to move to risk parity now, we believe more generally that the benefits that risk parity portfolios offer are largely an illusion,” he says.

“No particular fixed weight benchmark is a good solution for all time or all environments. Risk parity portfolios are no exception.”

In the paper he says there are three basic weaknesses in risk parity portfolios.

Sponsored Content

Firstly, they suffer from the same basic flaws as value-at-risk and other modern portfolio theory tools – they confuse volatility with risk, assuming that if the standard deviation of the portfolio over some particular time period is x per cent, that is really all the investor needs to know.

Secondly, the paper says, some of the asset classes generally included in these portfolios have risk premiums that may well be zero or negative for the foreseeable future.

And third, several of the asset classes involved in these portfolios have significant negative skew, which makes the backtests behind them suspect and, in conjunction with the leverage, may prove extremely painful to investors.

He says leverage adds an element of path dependency to investors.

“An unlevered investor can generally wait for prices to converge toward economic reality, but a levered investor may not have that luxury. A number of proponents of risk parity portfolios point that stocks are inherently levered investment because the average company has a debt/equity ratio of approximately 1:1. What makes that sort of leverage acceptable while the other is not? To our minds, one very large difference between the two is that the leverage companies acquire is long term and not marked to market.”

The paper says another problem for risk parity portfolios is that the risks that investors are leveraging may not actually have a positive return associated with them.

“We believe that several asset classes usually included in risk parity portfolios may well have negative risk premiums associated with them, either because of the pricing prevailing in the asset class today, or the general features of the asset class.”

He examines commodities and government bonds as examples of assets whose risk premium may prove negative for an inconveniently long time.

For GMO registered users the paper can be accessed here

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

A Simple Theory of the Financial Crisis; or, Why Fischer Black Still Matters

In this month’s Financial Analysts Journal, Tyler Cowen professor of economics at George Mason University, Virginia makes sense of the current financial crisis by drawing on some of Fischer Black’s ideas. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Arizona expands allocation ranges, freezes private investments

The $27 billion Arizona State Retirement System has extended its asset allocation ranges and postponed the approval of new commitments to private market investments until the end of June, unless an overriding investment opportunity exception exists. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Bps speak: the real value in internal management

A 10 per cent increase in internal investment management results in a 4.2 basis points increase in net value added to a pension fund’s bottom line, according to analysis of the CEM Benchmarking database, which has data on more than 380 global pension funds from 1991 to 2007. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Where the growth is: mandate trends in 2009

As a recent survey by US management consultant Casey Quirk showed, for investment management, 2009 is all about beta. Director of research, Ben Phillips, spoke to Kristen Paech about mandates that pension funds are investigating, and the role alpha may play. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

That market’s got style: investing through cycles

Style investing remains a powerful tool in periods of market volatility and, in particular, style analysis reminds investors to be aware of the distinction between overall market risk and stock specific risk. Amanda White spoke with director of Style Research, Robert Schwob. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Risk reduction pays off for ABP

The giant Dutch pension fund ABP’s plan to reduce investment risk as a means of recovery from an underfunded position is paying dividends, with the coverage ratio increasing from 86 to 91 per cent from March to April. mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Previous