Optimal Holdings of Active, Passive, and Smart Beta Strategies
Foundational research: We study the basic problem of allocating amongst a set of equity strategies given a policy benchmark from an expected shortfall perspective. We find that portfolios that minimize expected shortfall differ substantially from portfolios generated using conventional methods.
Asset owners with long horizons can have their cake and eat it too – which means lower expected shortfall but higher expected surplus and lower probability of shortfall – but this requires aiming higher from a tracking error perspective than implied by the conventional mean tracking error approach.
Optimal Holdings of Active, Passive, and Smart Beta Strategies
Foundational research: We study the basic problem of allocating amongst a set of equity strategies given a policy benchmark from an expected shortfall perspective. We find that portfolios that minimize expected shortfall differ substantially from portfolios generated using conventional methods.
Asset owners with long horizons can have their cake and eat it too – which means lower expected shortfall but higher expected surplus and lower probability of shortfall – but this requires aiming higher from a tracking error perspective than implied by the conventional mean tracking error approach.