Sunday, October 2, 2011

US portfolio recommendation (from 3, October 2011)


The portfolio recommendation is based on two low-volatility strategies: a long-only minimum-variance portfolio and a “130:30” minimum-variance portfolio, which is long 130% and short 30%.

For more details about the implementation of these strategies, please read the following post: Some efficient low-volatility portfolios: the minimum-variance policy

The long-only and the 130:30 low-volatility portfolios recommended for this week, with their corresponding weights, can be found in this file: US_weights_20111003.csv

Although I recommend a portfolio composition every week, it is desirable to maintain this composition for several weeks (for instance a quarter year), and then rebalance with the new composition.
The current long-only portfolio composition is very similar to that of previous quarter: two less stocks (out of 23) have been sold and other has been added. The turnover is 19% (due to the portfolio growth and the trading of these four companies). On the other hand, the turnover of the current 130:30 portfolio is a bit larger: 25%.
Regarding the performance, over the last year (52 weeks), the long-only strategy attained a volatility of 10.4% (versus 17.8% of the S&P 500). The volatility of the 130:30 strategy is even better: 8.9%.

The weekly 95%-VaR of the long-only portfolio was 2.2% (versus 4.6% of the S&P 500). The corresponding VaR for the 130:30 portfolio was 1.9%.

The last year annualized Sharpe ratio of the long-only strategy was 1.3 (after proportional transaction costs of 40 bps were discounted). On the other hand, the SR of the 130:30 strategy was 1.7. Finally, the SR of the S&P 500 was 0.004 over the same period.

In the next figure, you can see the compounded return over the last 52 weeks of the three considered portfolios.


Both low-volatility portfolios attain better returns than those of the S&P 500.

But let add information about the risk. The next graph shows the risk-return space for the three considered portfolios.


The red point represents the mean return and volatility of the long-only portfolio over the past 52 weeks. On the other hand, the green point represents the 130:30 portfolio, and finally the blue point represents the S&P 500 index over the same 52 past weeks.

We can see the two low-volatility portfolios have better mean returns than that of the S&P 500, and also their volatilities are better. In this case, we say the low-vol portfolios dominate the index.

I have computed the same risk-return space for every week over the last year, using the same 52-weeks historical method to estimate the mean returns and the volatilities. The long-only and 130:30 portfolios attained a higher return than that of the S&P 500 (96% and 85% of the time, respectively). Moreover, the volatility of both low-vol portfolios was always less than that of the S&P 500.

As a summary, the low-volatility strategies dominate the market index most of the time, showing they attain consistently better risk-adjusted returns.

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