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Managing Downside Risk in Financial Markets
- 1st Edition - September 20, 2001
- Editors: Frank A. Sortino, Stephen Satchell
- Language: English
- Paperback ISBN:9 7 8 - 0 - 0 8 - 0 9 7 1 8 3 - 4
- eBook ISBN:9 7 8 - 0 - 0 8 - 0 4 9 6 2 0 - 7
Quantitative methods have revolutionized the area of trading, regulation, risk management, portfolio construction, asset pricing and treasury activities, and governmental activity… Read more
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Request a sales quoteQuantitative methods have revolutionized the area of trading, regulation, risk management, portfolio construction, asset pricing and treasury activities, and governmental activity such as central banking to name but some of the applications. Downside-risk, as a quantitative method, is an accurate measurement of investment risk, because it captures the risk of not accomplishing the investor's goal.'Downside Risk in Financial Markets' demonstrates how downside-risk can produce better results in performance measurement and asset allocation than variance modelling. Theory, as well as the practical issues involved in its implementation, is covered and the arguments put forward emphatically show the superiority of downside risk models to variance models in terms of risk measurement and decision making. Variance considers all uncertainty to be risky. Downside-risk only considers returns below that needed to accomplish the investor's goal, to be risky.Risk is one of the biggest issues facing the financial markets today. 'Downside Risk in Financial Markets' outlines the major issues for Investment Managers and focuses on "downside-risk" as a key activity in managing risk in investment/portfolio management. Managing risk is now THE paramount topic within the financial sector and recurring losses through the 1990s has shocked financial institutions into placing much greater emphasis on risk management and control.Free Software Enclosed To help you implement the knowledge you will gain from reading this book, a CD is enclosed that contains free software programs that were previously only available to institutional investors under special licensing agreement to The pension Research Institute. This is our contribution to the advancement of professionalism in portfolio management.The Forsey-Sortino model is an executable program that:1. Runs on any PC without the need of any additional software.2. Uses the bootstrap procedure developed by Dr. Bradley Effron at Stanford University to uncover what could have happened, instead of relying only on what did happen in the past. This is the best procedure we know of for describing the nature of uncertainty in financial markets. 3. Fits a three parameter lognormal distribution to the bootstrapped data to allow downside risk to be calculated from a continuous distribution. This improves the efficacy of the downside risk estimates.4. Calculates upside potential and downside risk from monthly returns on any portfolio manager. 5. Calculates upside potential and downside risk from any user defined distribution.Forsey-Sortino Source Code:1. The source code, written in Visual Basic 5.0, is provided for institutional investors who want to add these calculations to their existing financial services. 2. No royalties are required for this source code, providing institutions inform clients of the source of these calculations. A growing number of services are now calculating downside risk in a manner that we are not comfortable with. Therefore, we want investors to know when downside risk and upside potential are calculated in accordance with the methodology described in this book. Riddles Spreadsheet:1. Neil Riddles, former Senior Vice President and Director of Performance Analysis at Templeton Global Advisors, now COO at Hansberger Global Advisors Inc., offers a free spreadsheet in excel format.2. The spreadsheet calculates downside risk and upside potential relative to the returns on an index
- Brings together a range of relevant material, not currently available in a single volume source.
- Provides practical information on how financial organisations can use downside risk techniques and technological developments to effectively manage risk in their portfolio management.
- Provides a rigorous theoretical underpinning for the use of downside risk techniques. This is important for the long-run acceptance of the methodology, since such arguments justify consultant's recommendations to pension funds and other plan sponsors.
Investment/portfolio managers; Equity trust/fund managers; Portfolio planners in most financial institutions and investment houses; Directors of quantitative analysis; Chief economists in investment houses; Consultants; Actuaries; Risk managers; Regulators; Central bankers.
List of contributors; Preface; Applications of downside risk - From alpha to omega (Frank A. Sortino); The Dutch view: developing a strategic benchmark in an ALM framework (Robert van der Meer); The consultant/financial planner's view: a new paradigm for advising individual accounts (Sally Atwater); The mathematician's view: modelling uncertainty with the three parameter lognormal (Hal Forsey); A software developer's view: using Post-Modern Portfolio Theory to improve investment performance measurement (Brian M. Rom and Kathleen W. Ferguson); An evaluation of value at risk and the information ratio (for investors concerned with downside risk) (Joseph Messina); A portfolio manager's view of downside risk (Neil Riddles); Underlying theory - Investment risk: a unified approach to upside and downside returns (Leslie A. Balzer); Lower partial-moment capital asset pricing models: a re-examination (Stephen E. Satchell); Preference functions and risk-adjusted performance measures (Auke Plantinga and Sebastiaan de Groot); Building a mean-downside risk portfolio frontier (Gustavo M. de Athayde); FARM: a financial actuarial risk model (Robert S. Clarkson); Appendix: The Forsey-Sortino model tutorial; Index.
- No. of pages: 272
- Language: English
- Edition: 1
- Published: September 20, 2001
- Imprint: Butterworth-Heinemann
- Paperback ISBN: 9780080971834
- eBook ISBN: 9780080496207
FS
Frank A. Sortino
Dr. Sortino founded the Pension Research Institute in 1981, focusisng on problems facing fiduciaries. He is also Professor of Finance Emeritus at San Francisco State University.
He is known internationally for his published research on measuring and managing investment risk and the widely used Sortino Ratio.
Affiliations and expertise
Chairman and Chief Investment Officer, Pension Research InstituteSS
Stephen Satchell
Stephen Satchell is a Fellow of Trinity College, the Reader in Financial Econometrics at the University of Cambridge and Visiting Professor at Birkbeck College, City University Business School and University of Technology, Sydney. He provides consultancy for a range of city institutions in the broad area of quantitative finance. He has published papers in many journals and has a particular interest in risk.
Affiliations and expertise
Reader in Financial Econometrics, Trinity College, Cambridge, UK