how VaR can be used as a performance benchmark

ajsa

New Member
Hi David,

Could you elaborate "Relative VAR" (how VaR can be used as a performance benchmark). Is it same as Tracking Error VAR?

Thanks.
 

David Harper CFA FRM

David Harper CFA FRM
Subscriber
asja,

They have in common that both are "merely quantiles" (i.e., VaR) but tracking error VaR implies (needs) a benchmark.

Our "standard issue" VaR is what Jorion calls absolute VaR (using Dowd's notion b/c I favor its robustness to adjustments):
absolute VaR = -expected return + normal deviate (as function of confidence) * volatility
e.g., = -5% return + 2.33 deviate @ 95% one-tail * 20% volatility
absolute VaR is the loss from zero or, from where we start (initial value)

relative VaR = normal deviate (as function of confidence) * volatility
relative VaR is the loss from the expected future value and, therefore, must be larger b/c it gives no "credit" for the expected gain

to compare them, please look at bottom (green cells) of:
http://www.bionicturtle.com/premium/spreadsheet/4.a.1_two_asset_var_relative_vs_absolute/

Tracking error VaR, as Jorion has defined it, is relative VaR but replace portfolio volatility with tracking error;
and tracking error = standard deviation of (portfolio returns - benchmark)

so:
tracking error VaR = normal deviate (as function of confidence) * tracking error
e.g., I have simulated example here @ http://www.bionicturtle.com/premium/spreadsheet/1.a.7._simulation_tracking_error_sortino/

the TE VaR above is a parametric sort, right? we can also perform an "historical TE VaR" by sorting the difference between portfolio returns and benchmarket return; e.g.,

portfolio return - benchmark(t-x) = + 6%
portf - benchmark(t-y) = + 5%
portf - benchmark(t-z) = + 3%
and so on ...

if we had a list of 100 of these "deviations," we can look down this list to the 95th to get a tracking error VaR.
based on the historical sample, the worst we expect to underperform the benchmark with 95% confidence is X/.
(But Jorion defines the parametric sort, just trying to show that VaR is just a distributional quantile ... the whole enchilada is generating the distribution)

David
 
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