Hello,
I just watched the video for ch 14 for Grinold and there were a few things that stumped me. For instance, at one point you said that if the benchmark really over-performs, then the active return will be high. But the formula says that active return=portfolio return-benchmark return. Wouldn't this mean that the active return would be less if the benchmark return is high? I think you might have meant that the portfolio return would be high if the benchmark return was high, then again, you obviously know this material way better than I do.
Also, for the two formulas on slide 11 of the video, does theta equal alpha for the residual case? If so, what does it represent in the active case?
I just ask because if you re-arrange both of those equations you get different values for return on the portfolio:
Residual: return on portfolio=theta plus Beta*return of benchmark
Acive: return on portfolio=theta + return on benchmark+Beta*return on benchmark.
What is actually meant by the "risk aversion parameter"? I see some formulas that use it, but what does it actually represent and what does the amount represent? Does a risk aversion parameter of .05 really mean anything compared to a value of 0.1?
Sorry for the REALLY long question. The choice of GARP to include this chapter is really bad. You need a LOT of background to even understand what is going on and to understand what the variables represent.
Thanks!
Shannon
I just watched the video for ch 14 for Grinold and there were a few things that stumped me. For instance, at one point you said that if the benchmark really over-performs, then the active return will be high. But the formula says that active return=portfolio return-benchmark return. Wouldn't this mean that the active return would be less if the benchmark return is high? I think you might have meant that the portfolio return would be high if the benchmark return was high, then again, you obviously know this material way better than I do.
Also, for the two formulas on slide 11 of the video, does theta equal alpha for the residual case? If so, what does it represent in the active case?
I just ask because if you re-arrange both of those equations you get different values for return on the portfolio:
Residual: return on portfolio=theta plus Beta*return of benchmark
Acive: return on portfolio=theta + return on benchmark+Beta*return on benchmark.
What is actually meant by the "risk aversion parameter"? I see some formulas that use it, but what does it actually represent and what does the amount represent? Does a risk aversion parameter of .05 really mean anything compared to a value of 0.1?
Sorry for the REALLY long question. The choice of GARP to include this chapter is really bad. You need a LOT of background to even understand what is going on and to understand what the variables represent.
Thanks!
Shannon