Hi David,
There is a question that confuses me a lot...
Consider a portfolio of N assets worth $100 million with normally distributed returns. The standard deviations of the assets differ, but the correlation between any pair of assets is zero. As N becomes very large, the VaR of the portfolio will:
A. approach the value-weighted average of the standard deviations
B. approach the arithmetic average of the standard deviations
C. approach the standard deviation of the market portfolio
D. approach zero
The correct answer is D. While I just don't understand why C is not correct. In my understanding, a portfolio contains N assets when N is very large is very similar as a market portfolio, so the unsystematic risk should approach zero when N is large. However, I think the systematic risk still exists, and answer D doesn't account in systematic risk...
Could you correct me where I was wrong? Thanks in advance!!
There is a question that confuses me a lot...
Consider a portfolio of N assets worth $100 million with normally distributed returns. The standard deviations of the assets differ, but the correlation between any pair of assets is zero. As N becomes very large, the VaR of the portfolio will:
A. approach the value-weighted average of the standard deviations
B. approach the arithmetic average of the standard deviations
C. approach the standard deviation of the market portfolio
D. approach zero
The correct answer is D. While I just don't understand why C is not correct. In my understanding, a portfolio contains N assets when N is very large is very similar as a market portfolio, so the unsystematic risk should approach zero when N is large. However, I think the systematic risk still exists, and answer D doesn't account in systematic risk...
Could you correct me where I was wrong? Thanks in advance!!