Outperformance Testing of a Dynamic Assets Portfolio Selection Supplemented with a Continuous Paths Levy Process
Authors
Abstract:
This study aims at getting a better performance for optimal stock portfolios by modeling stocks prices dynamics through a continuous paths Levy process. To this end, the share prices are simulated using a multi-dimensional geometric Brownian motion model. Then, we use the results to form the optimal portfolio by maximizing the Sharpe ratio and comparing the findings with the outputs of the conventional model. To examine the robustness of the results, we have evaluated its performance for different investment horizons and various volumes of price information over a long period (approximately twenty years) in the Tehran Stock Exchange (TSE). Findings indicate that within the trading dates spanning the interval 24-Mar-2001 to 19-Sep-2020, the return of the portfolios obtained from applying this simulation scheme for maximization of Sharpe ratio is (244% on average) higher and their risk (standard deviation) are lower (1227% on average) than those realized by the conventional methods. Additionally, a comparison of the simulation approach with a performance of the actual market portfolios indicates that the Sharpe ratios of the simulation method are higher (0.055% on average) than those resulting from the total market performances. The results of the stochastic dominance test show that our proposed strategy has a first-order stochastic dominance (FSD) over the conventional one and market portfolios, that means at each level of cumulative distribution, the Sharpe ratio of our method is higher, and as FSD test makes no assumptions about the curvature of investors' utility functions, these results do not depend on the degree of risk aversion of investors, and as long as investors prefer a higher Sharpe ratio, they would be better off if they follow our proposed strategy.
similar resources
the impact of portfolio assessment on iranian efl students essay writing: a process-oriented approach
this study was conducted to investigate the impact of portfolio assessment as a process-oriented assessment mechanism on iranian efl students’ english writing and its subskills of focus, elaboration, organization, conventions, and vocabulary. out of ninety juniors majoring in english literature and translation at the university of isfahan, sixty one of them who were at the same level of writing...
15 صفحه اولDynamic Portfolio Selection Methods for Power Generation Assets
In this paper we start off by reviewing the literature on how to extend the meanvariance portfolio model to multi-stage portfolio problems. We then apply a multiperiod portfolio selection model to power generation assets, which is based on a reallocation methodology with scenario tree. Two solution approaches are used: the multi-period rebalancing model and the global solution one. These approa...
full textExtension of Portfolio Selection Problem with Fuzzy Goal Programming: A Fuzzy Allocated Portfolio Approach
Recently, the economic crisis has resulted in instability in stock exchange market and this has caused high volatilities in stock value of exchanged firms. Under these conditions, considering uncertainty for a favorite investment is more serious than before. Multi-objective Portfolio selection (Return, Liquidity, Risk and Initial cost of Investment objectives) using MINMAX fuzzy goal programmin...
full textPortfolio Selection with Multiple Risky Assets and Capital Gains Taxes
We analyze the portfolio choice of an investor who can invest in two risky assets (in addition to a riskless asset) and who is subject to taxes on realized capital gains. These taxes appear in the portfolio choice problem as a form of time-dependent, endogenous transaction costs. Similar to the case of portfolio choice with transaction costs, the optimal strategy of the taxable investor contain...
full textPortfolio Choice with Illiquid Assets
We investigate how the inability to continuously trade an asset affects portfolio choice. We extend the standard Merton model to include an illiquid asset that can only be traded at infrequent, stochastic intervals. Because consumption is financed through liquid wealth only, the presence of illiquidity leads to increased and state-dependent risk aversion. Illiquidity leads to under-investment i...
full textPortfolio Optimization with Many Assets:
We investigate the properties of mean-variance efficient portfolios when the number of assets is large. We show analytically and empirically that the proportion of assets held short converges to 50% as the number of assets grows, and the investment proportions are extreme, with several assets held in large positions. The cost of the no-shortselling constraint increases dramatically with the num...
full textMy Resources
Journal title
volume 16 issue 2
pages 253- 282
publication date 2021-06
By following a journal you will be notified via email when a new issue of this journal is published.
Hosted on Doprax cloud platform doprax.com
copyright © 2015-2023