1 / 39

Superviser: Professor Moisă Altăr MSc Student: George Popescu

ACADEMY OF ECONOMIC STUDIES DOCTORAL SCHOOL OF FINANCE-BANKING ORDERED MEAN DIFFERENCE AND STOCHASTIC DOMINANCE AS PORTFOLIO PERFORMANCE MEASURES with an approach to cointegration. Superviser: Professor Moisă Altăr MSc Student: George Popescu. Scheme. • THE EQUIVALENT MARGIN

kendall
Download Presentation

Superviser: Professor Moisă Altăr MSc Student: George Popescu

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. ACADEMY OF ECONOMIC STUDIESDOCTORAL SCHOOL OF FINANCE-BANKINGORDERED MEAN DIFFERENCE AND STOCHASTIC DOMINANCE AS PORTFOLIO PERFORMANCE MEASURESwith an approach to cointegration Superviser: Professor Moisă Altăr MSc Student: George Popescu

  2. Scheme • THE EQUIVALENT MARGIN • THE OMD. UTILITY FUNCTION AND POVERTY GAP FUNCTION. • STOCHASTIC DOMINANCE • THE ECONOMETRIC MODEL • EMPIRICAL APPLICATION

  3. THE EQUIVALENT MARGIN • r: fund return R: benchmark return t: penalty levied on the fund return x: investment in fund • investor’s decision problem:

  4. The equivalent margin:

  5. P The OMD(Bowden, 2000) = the special case when, in the equivalent margin formula, the utility function has the form of a put pay-off

  6. Motivation for this kind of utility function • Investor is interested in obtaining a target return P, being indifferent to values of R in excess of P and negatively exposed if the return falls below the target • P- established according to his appetite for risk • exactly the converse of the poverty gap function (Davidson and Duclos, 2000) • idea from Merton (1981) and Henriksson and Merton (1981)

  7. A and B: two random variablesA second order stochastically dominates (SSD) B up to a poverty line z if:

  8. Davidson and Duclos (2000) demonstrate that the SSD condition can be written as: The Poverty gap function:

  9. Interpretation of SSD condition in terms of poverty gap function: The average poverty gap in B (the dominated distribution) is greater than in A (the dominant distribution) for all poverty lines less than or equal to z. There is a longer way from the actual level of income B to the poverty threshold than from the actual level of A to the same poverty threshold.

  10. The put payoff - like utility function: The poverty gap function: So: this kind of utility function shows how far we are from the poverty threshold, after we surpassed the threshold

  11. The OMD Introducing the utility function in the equivalent margin formula gives: OMD = the average area between the regression curve of the fund return on the benchmark return and the benchmark return itself, taken on the Ox axis If t(P)>0 for all P, then the fund was superior to the benchmark

  12. The equivalent margin can be written as a weighted average of OMD’s (for all P)

  13. Interpretation: - each investor can be seen as a spectrum of elementary investors (“gnomes” as named by Bowden), each having a put option profile utility function, but differing by the “strike price” (P), which represents the degree of aversion to risk (P moves to the right as the aversion to risk decreases) tU: independent of the degree of aversion to risk

  14. Testing for SSD or, in terms of the poverty gap function:

  15. OMD for r with R as benchmark: OMD for R with r as benchmark:

  16. THE ECONOMETRIC MODEL • Using the Forsyhte polynomials, transform the initial regression of the fund return on the benchmark return into a regression of the fund return on a set of regressors whose matrix is orthogonal • the benchmark: divided into several indexes • insures of non-multicollinearity between independent variables

  17. The Forsythe polynomials:

  18. The estimated equation: The estimated values for OMD [t(P)]

  19. EMPIRICAL APPLICATION • Data: • r: Capital Plus return (VUAN series) • R:mutual fund index return (IFM series) • Period: • 3 January 2000 - 1 April 2002 • Frequency: • weekly • Number of observations: • 118

  20. Initial (gross) regression equation (34 regressors): Only the significant regressors maintained in terms of t-Statistic (p-values <0.05):

  21. Verifying the OLS presumptions:

  22. Independence of explanatory variables of residuals:

  23. Stationarity of residuals

  24. COMPUTATION OF OMD - series sorted in ascending order after the IFM values

  25. Interpretation: • OMD positive for every realisation of the benchamark the fund was superior (OMD dominant) to the benchmark and preferred by every risk averse investor, no matter his degree of aversion to risk (because if OMD is positive, then the equivalent margin, which is a weighted average of OMD’s, is also positive)

  26. Preferred by both less and more risk averse investors • a downward trend the more risk averse investors prefer more than the less risk averse investors the fund • the fund added utility to both less and more risk averse investors, but the more risk averse ones appreciate more the utility given by the fund than the less risk averse investors.

  27. OMD: the average area between the regression of the fund return on the benchmark return

  28. The area is always positive the fund was OMD dominant over the market, though there were points where the fund return was less than the benchmark return • Inconvenient: the first values for OMD are computed using few values • Remedy: Baysian approach; I tried implement the exponentially weighted OMD (EWOMD), which gives less weighting to the first values

  29. Did the fund SSD the benchmark?Inverting the benchmark: The regression to be estimated:

  30. Verifying the OLS presumptions:

  31. The OMD for IFM

  32. Interpretation: • OMD is not negative for all the fund return values the fund did not SSD the market (represented by the benchmark) • not always the poverty gap was less for the fund than for the benchmark • the fund SSD the benchmark only for the greater values of the fund returns the fund was preferred especially by the more risk averse investors (who fix lower levels they wish the fund to attain)

  33. AN APPROACH TO COINTEGRATION • both the OMD measure and the cointegration theory describe long run behaviour • the fund is allowed to have temporary fall below the benchmark, but these falls do not affect the overall conclusion if the long run behaviour indicates the superiority of the fund • Does exist a cointegration relation between VUAN and IFM that verifies the superiority of the fund?

  34. VUAN and IFM series: non-stationary VAR(3) system

  35. VAR(3) and not VAR(2) because of: • LR test • Akaike and Schwartz • lack of autocorrelation of residuals

  36. Apply the Johansen test to find a cointegrating relation: • The dominance of the fund in terms of OMD verified by the cointegrating relation

  37. Remained to be developed: • Computation of OMD (the first values: computed using few values) - Baysian approach, EWOMD • equivalent margin - martingale measures

More Related