Title: The Theory of Active Portfolio Management
1Chapter 28
- The Theory ofActive PortfolioManagement
2Lure of Active Management
- Are markets totally efficient?
- Some managers outperform the market for extended
periods - While the abnormal performance may not be too
large, it is too large to be attributed solely to
noise - Evidence of anomalies such as the turn of the
year exist - The evidence suggests that there is some role for
active management
3Market Timing
- Adjust the portfolio for movements in the market
- Shift between stocks and money market instruments
or bonds - Results higher returns, lower risk (downside is
eliminated) - With perfect ability to forecast behaves like an
option
4Rate of Return of a Perfect Market Timer
5Returns from 1987 - 1996
Year Lg. Stock Return T-Bill Return 87
5.34 5.50 88 16.86 6.44 89
31.34 8.32 90 -3.20 7.86 91
30.66 5.65 92 7.71 3.54 93
9.87 2.97 94 1.29 3.91 95
37.71 5.58 96 23.00 5.20 Average
16.06 Standard Dev. 14.05
6With Perfect Forecasting Ability
- Switch to T-Bills in 87, 90 and 94
- No negative returns or losses
- Average Ret. 17.44
- S.D. Ret. 12.38
- Results with perfect timing
- Increase in mean return
- Lower S.D.
7With Imperfect Ability to Forecast
- Long horizon to judge the ability
- Judge proportions of correct calls
- Bull markets and bear market calls
8Superior Selection Ability
- Concentrate funds in undervalued stocks or
undervalued sectors or industries - Balance funds in an active portfolio and in a
passive portfolio - Active selection will mean some unsystematic risk
9Treynor-Black Model
- Model used to combine actively managed stocks
with a passively managed portfolio - Using a reward-to-risk measure that is similar to
the the Sharpe Measure, the optimal combination
of active and passive portfolios can be determined
10Treynor-Black Model Assumptions
- Analysts will have a limited ability to find a
select number of undervalued securities - Portfolio managers can estimate the expected
return and risk, and the abnormal performance for
the actively-managed portfolio - Portfolio managers can estimate the expected
risk and return parameters for a broad market
(passively managed) portfolio
11Reward to Variability Measures
12Reward to Variability Measures
Appraisal Ratio
?
A
?
(eA)
?
Alpha for the active portfolio
A
?
Unsystematic standard deviation for active
(eA)
13Reward to Variability Measures
Combined Portfolio
E
)
-
2
2
m
f
2
S
A
p
?eA
14Treynor-Black Allocation
CAL
E(r)
CML
P
A
M
Rf
?
15Summary Points Treynor-Black Model
- Sharpe Measure will increase with added ability
to pick stocks - Slope of CALgtCML
- (rp-rf)/?p gt (rm-rf)/?p
- P is the portfolio that combines the passively
managed portfolio with the actively managed
portfolio - The combined efficient frontier has a higher
return for the same level of risk