Hi,
I am unable to understand this section of the chapter:
Constantinides proved that the optimal strategy is to trade whenever risky asset positions hit upper or lower bounds. Within these bounds is an interval of no trading. The no-trading band straddles the optimal asset allocation from a model that assumes you can continuously trade without frictions. The no-trade interval is a function of the size of the transactions costs and the volatility of the risky asset.
Constantinides estimates that for transactions costs of 10%, there are no-trade intervals greater than 25% around an optimal holding of 25% for a risky asset with a volatility of 35%. That is, the asset owner would not trade between (0%, 50%) – indeed, very large fluctuations in the illiquid asset position. Illiquid asset investors should expect to rebalance very infrequently.
Also do we have a question set for this chapter?
I am unable to understand this section of the chapter:
Constantinides proved that the optimal strategy is to trade whenever risky asset positions hit upper or lower bounds. Within these bounds is an interval of no trading. The no-trading band straddles the optimal asset allocation from a model that assumes you can continuously trade without frictions. The no-trade interval is a function of the size of the transactions costs and the volatility of the risky asset.
Constantinides estimates that for transactions costs of 10%, there are no-trade intervals greater than 25% around an optimal holding of 25% for a risky asset with a volatility of 35%. That is, the asset owner would not trade between (0%, 50%) – indeed, very large fluctuations in the illiquid asset position. Illiquid asset investors should expect to rebalance very infrequently.
Also do we have a question set for this chapter?