Hi, Andrew raises a good question here, with respect to GARP's sample question. The setup gives a typical two-asset portfolio with correlations and asks, "If asset 1 is dropped from the portfolio, what will be the reduction in portfolio VaR?" I think that's a bit of a mean question because it wants the incremental VaR, but doesn't use that term. So, it's understandable to think of the component VaR.
I thought it would be useful to summarize the difference. Here is the XLS for my calcs below: http://db.tt/VexMVsNR
(I personally think this is conceptually difficult. I can't speak for you, but I almost need to review the spreadsheet to begin to come to grips with these two concepts)
Here are my assumptions for a two-asset portfolio (borrowing EUR + CAD portfolio from Jorion Chapter 7, but changing the numbers to my convenience)
(again, GARP's sample question L2.2.18 is asking for the Incremental VaR: "If asset 1 is dropped from the portfolio, what will be the reduction in portfolio VaR?")
I thought it would be useful to summarize the difference. Here is the XLS for my calcs below: http://db.tt/VexMVsNR
(I personally think this is conceptually difficult. I can't speak for you, but I almost need to review the spreadsheet to begin to come to grips with these two concepts)
Here are my assumptions for a two-asset portfolio (borrowing EUR + CAD portfolio from Jorion Chapter 7, but changing the numbers to my convenience)
- Portfolio is $100 invested equally in two currencies: CAD position = $50, EUR position = $50
- Volatility (CAD) = 30%, Volatility (EUR) = 40%, correlation(CAD, EUR) = 0.
- VaR confidence in 95%, such that normal deviate = 1.645
- CAD = $50 * 30% * 1.645 = $24.67
- EUR = $50 * 40% * 1.645 = $32.90
- As portfolio volatility = 25%,
- Diversified portfolio VaR = $100 * 25% * 1.645 = $41.1
(again, GARP's sample question L2.2.18 is asking for the Incremental VaR: "If asset 1 is dropped from the portfolio, what will be the reduction in portfolio VaR?")
- Incremental VaR (CAD) = the reduction in Portfolio VaR if we delete the CAD position = $41.1 - $32.9 = $8.22
- Incremental VaR (EUR) = the reduction in Portfolio VaR if we delete the EUR position = $41.1 - 24.67 = $16.45
- Or put another way, if we start with just a $50 CAD position, our one-asset portfolio VaR is $24.67. The incremental EUR VaR is the increase in our portfolio VaR as we add the EUR position: $24.67 + $16.45 = $41.1 for our new two-asset portfolio.
- Component VaR (CAD) = $50 * 25% portfolio volatility * 0.72 beta (CAD, Portfolio) * 1.645 deviate = $14.80
- Component VaR (EUR) = $50 * 25% portfolio volatility * 1.28 beta (EUR, Portfolio) * 1.645 deviate = $26.32
- By design, component VaRs sum to portfolio VaR: $14.80 + $26.32 = $41.1
- The only role of VaR here is to multiply volatility by the normal deviate (1.645, in this case). We could drop the deviates and just refer to the marginal risk contribution, that's what component VaR really is. In this example, the portfolio volatility is 25%. If we drop the deviates, we would find that the marginal contribution (CAD) to portfolio volatility is 9.0% and the marginal contribution (EUR) is 16%.
- Further, the marginal VaR is related to this component VaR as they both characterize the linear approximation
- Marginal VaR is unitless partial derivative; i.e., the change in portfolio VaR with respect to a change in the position
- For the CAD position, Marginal VaR[CAD] = Portfolio-VaR/Portfolio-Value*beta(CAD, Portfolio) = $41.1/$100.0 * 0.720 = 0.2961
- For the EUR position, Marginal VaR[EUR] = Portfolio-VaR/Portfolio-Value*beta(EUR, Portfolio) = $41.1/$100.0 * 1.280 = 0.5264
- For the CAD position, Marginal VaR[CAD] = Portfolio-VaR/Portfolio-Value*beta(CAD, Portfolio) = $41.1/$100.0 * 0.720 = 0.2961
- Component VaR is the (unitless) Marginal VaR scaled by the position
- For the CAD position, Component VaR[CAD] = marginal VaR[CAD] * CAD-Position = 0.2961 * $50.0 = $14.80
- For the EUR position, Component VaR[EUR] = marginal VaR[EUR] * EUR-Position = 0.0.5264 * $50.0 = $26.32
- Marginal VaR is unitless partial derivative; i.e., the change in portfolio VaR with respect to a change in the position
- Component VaR is not a terrible answer. But Component VaR (and marginal VaR) are linear approximations (first partial derivatives). Per a grand FRM theme, the larger the component, the greater the error (see Jorion Fig 7-4 to visually see the problem: but it's just like the problem with duration). Component VaR is an approximation of incremental VaR, that loses accuracy as the position size increases
- Incremental VaR is more accurate because it's a re-pricing ("full revaluation"). The subtraction $41.1 - $32.9 = $8.22 is an illustration of full revaluation: price the portfolio, re-price the portfolio, take the difference.
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