Advanced Portfolio Management. Giuseppe A. Paleologo

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Advanced Portfolio Management - Giuseppe A. Paleologo


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A good portfolio manager can be – and should be! – a good risk manager, too. I believe it is possible to explain the basics of a systematic approach to portfolio construction without resorting to advanced mathematics and requiring much preexisting knowledge. This book is an elementary book in the sense that it assumes very little. I hope most readers will find in it something they already know, but that all readers will find something they did not know.

      Summing up, there is no master theory yet of portfolio management. There are problems and technologies to solve in part these problems. Theories come and go; but a solution to a real problem is forever. As you explore portfolio management, you will find papers on optimization, position sizing, exploratory analysis of alternative data, timing of factors. Keep in mind the following maxim, which I paraphrase from a seminal paper on reproducible research:

      An article about the theory of portfolio management is not the scholarship itself, it is merely advertising of the scholarship.

       [Buckheit and Donoho, 1995]

      Always look for simulation-based validations of a theory, and question the soundness of the assumptions in the simulation; and always look for empirical tests based on historical data, while being aware that these historical tests are most interesting when they show the limits of applicability of the theory, not when they confirm it [López de Prado, 2020].

      Now, what are the problems?

       The first is an improvement in the alpha research process. If you know what the environment is, then you know if a bet on a particular company carries with it unintended bets. Separating the stock from the environment gives you clarity of thought.

       The second is an improvement in the risk management process. If you know your environment, you can control your risk much more effectively; specifically, you can effectively reduce the environmental risk and keep only your intended bets; you can hedge out what you don't know.2

      This subject is covered throughout the book, and is the main subject of Chapters 3, 4, and 5.

      Once you have effectively estimated the true stock-specific return, your next problem is converting a thesis into an investment. It stands to reason that, the stronger the conviction, the larger the position should be. This leaves many questions unanswered. Is conviction the only variable? How does stock risk enter the sizing decision? What is the role played by the other stocks in the portfolio?

      This is the subject of Chapter 6.

      This is the subject of Chapter 8.

      Transaction costs play a crucial role in the viability of a trading strategy. Often, portfolio managers are not fully aware of the fact that these costs can eat up a substantial fraction of their revenues. As a result, they may over-trade, either by opening and closing positions more aggressively than needed, or by adjusting too often the size of a position over the lifetime of the trade. Earning events and other catalysts like product launches, drug approvals, sell-side upgrades/downgrades are an important source of revenue for fundamental PMs; how should one trade these events in order to maximize revenues inclusive of costs? Finally, what role should risk management play in event (and, in particular, earnings) trades? Positioning too early exposes the PM to unwanted risk in the days preceding the event.

      This is the subject of Sections 8.2.1 and 8.3.

      The output of your fundamental research changes continuously. The rules of your risk management process should not. They should be predictable, implementable, effective. These usually come in the form of limits: on your deployed capital, on your deployed portfolio risk, but also on less obvious dimensions of your strategy; for example, single-position maximum size is an important aspect of risk management. The challenge is to determine the rules that allow a manager to fully express her ideas while controlling risk.

      This is the subject of Section 7.2.

      This is the subject of Chapter 9.

      This challenge is not faced by all portfolio managers. When they are working for a multi-PM platform, leverage decisions are the responsibility of the firm. However, a few independent investors do start their own hedge funds, and choosing a leverage that makes


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