30 research outputs found
The Nature of Alpha
We suggest an empirical model of investment strategy returns which elucidates
the importance of non-Gaussian features, such as time-varying volatility,
asymmetry and fat tails, in explaining the level of expected returns.
Estimating the model on the (former) Lehman Brothers Hedge Fund Index data, we
demonstrate that the volatility compensation is a significant component of the
expected returns for most strategy styles, suggesting that many of these
strategies should be thought of as being `short vol'. We present some
fundamental and technical reasons why this should indeed be the case, and
suggest explanation for exception cases exhibiting `long vol' characteristics.
We conclude by drawing some lessons for hedge fund portfolio construction.Comment: 22 pages, 5 figures, 3 table
A Guide to Modeling Credit Term Structures
We give a comprehensive review of credit term structure modeling
methodologies. The conventional approach to modeling credit term structure is
summarized and shown to be equivalent to a particular type of the reduced form
credit risk model, the fractional recovery of market value approach. We argue
that the corporate practice and market observations do not support this
approach. The more appropriate assumption is the fractional recovery of par,
which explicitly violates the strippable cash flow valuation assumption that is
necessary for the conventional credit term structure definitions to hold. We
formulate the survival-based valuation methodology and give alternative
specifications for various credit term structures that are consistent with
market observations, and show how they can be empirically estimated from the
observable prices. We rederive the credit triangle relationship by considering
the replication of recovery swaps. We complete the exposition by presenting a
consistent measure of CDS-Bond basis and demonstrate its relation to a static
hedging strategy, which remains valid for non-par bonds and non-flat term
structures of interest rates and credit risk.Comment: 54 pages, 13 figures (references fixed
The Underlying Dynamics of Credit Correlations
We propose a hybrid model of portfolio credit risk where the dynamics of the underlying latent variables is governed by a one factor GARCH process. The distinctive feature of such processes is that the long-term aggregate return distributions can substantially deviate from the asymptotic Gaussian limit for very long horizons. We introduce the notion of correlation spectrum as a convenient tool for comparing portfolio credit loss generating models and pricing synthetic CDO tranches. Analyzing alternative specifications of the underlying dynamics, we conclude that the asymmetric models with TARCH volatility specification are the preferred choice for generating significant and persistent credit correlation skews