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Book Tail Risk of Hedge Funds

    Book Details:
  • Author : Gregor Aleksander Gawron
  • Publisher : Cuvillier Verlag
  • Release : 2007
  • ISBN : 386727441X
  • Pages : 150 pages

Download or read book Tail Risk of Hedge Funds written by Gregor Aleksander Gawron and published by Cuvillier Verlag. This book was released on 2007 with total page 150 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book Option Implied Tail Risk  Timing by Hedge Funds  and Performance

Download or read book Option Implied Tail Risk Timing by Hedge Funds and Performance written by Jung Soon Shin and published by . This book was released on 2018 with total page 67 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This paper focuses on an unexplored dimension of fund managers' timing ability: market-wide tail risk implied by information in options markets. We investigate whether hedge fund managers can strategically time market tail risk implied by options through adjusting their portfolios' market exposure to changes in market tail risk. Using an extensive sample of 6,147 equity-oriented hedge funds over the period 1996 to 2012, we find strong evidence of tail risk timing ability of hedge fund managers. We conduct bootstrap analysis and confirm that our tail risk timing ability is not attributed to pure luck. Furthermore, tail risk timing ability brings significant economic value to investors. Specifically, in out-of-sample tests, top-ranked hedge funds outperform bottom-ranked funds by 5-7% annually after adjusting for common risk factors. Also, we find that managers' tail risk timing skill persists over time, suggesting that hedge fund managers' tail risk timing ability reflects true managerial skill. Our overall results are robust to various hedge fund characteristics, subsample or sub-period analysis, the use of alternative timing abilities, and other hedge funds' managerial skills. Our empirical examination emphasizes the role of market-wide option-implied tail risk in hedge fund managers' skill and their performance.

Book The Tail Risk of Hedge Fund Returns

Download or read book The Tail Risk of Hedge Fund Returns written by and published by . This book was released on 2015 with total page pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: I test whether recently proposed, stock market-based tail risk measures explain hedge fund returns. The tail risk measures are TAIL (Kelly and Jiang; 2014), LBVIX (Agarwal, Arisoy, and Naik; 2014), VVIX (Park; 2013), and variations of these measures. The hedge fund data is a variety of hedge fund indices and different samples of individual hedge funds drawn from the Lipper/TASS database. Using EUR-denominated stocks and hedge funds instead of USD-denominated stocks and hedge funds, I test the results of Kelly and Jiang (2012) by applying their methodology to the Eurozone. The results are qualitatively identical, lending support to the claim that TAIL is a risk factor for hedge funds. On the other hand, I find evidence against the claim that TAIL suitably represents tail risk. Incorporating a weighting factor for the stocks' market capitalizations in the calculation of TAIL leads to a more plausible but very different evolution of TAIL and reverses the effect of TAIL in the cross-section of hedge fund returns. Ultimately, no evidence remains for the claim that exposure to tail risk is compensated with higher overall returns. In the second part of this paper, I replicate the results of Agarwal, Arisoy, and Naik (2014) and perform additional robustness tests that confirm the relevance of the second-order volatility measure LBVIX for hedge fund returns. These results extend to the VVIX as an alternative, non-investable measure of second-order volatility. Hedge funds that are more negatively exposed to second-order volatility achieve higher average excess and alpha returns. Following Park (2013), I decompose VVIX into the integrated volatility of volatility (IVV) and the jump variation (VJUMP). This decomposition allows a further and novel analysis of the relationship between second-order volatility and hedge fund returns. I find that it is not the exposure to volatility jumps but to diffusive movements in volatility that is negative.

Book Tail Risk Hedging

Download or read book Tail Risk Hedging written by Andrew Rozanov and published by . This book was released on 2014 with total page 304 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book Hedge Funds

    Book Details:
  • Author : Greg N. Gregoriou
  • Publisher : John Wiley & Sons
  • Release : 2007-09-10
  • ISBN : 0471745367
  • Pages : 687 pages

Download or read book Hedge Funds written by Greg N. Gregoriou and published by John Wiley & Sons. This book was released on 2007-09-10 with total page 687 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Whether already experienced with hedge funds or just thinking about investing in them, readers need a firm understanding of this unique investment vehicle in order to achieve maximum success. Hedge Funds unites over thirty of the top practitioners and academics in the hedge fund industry to provide readers with the latest findings in this field. Their analysis deals with a variety of topics, from new methods of performance evaluation to portfolio allocation and risk/return matters. Although some of the information is technical in nature, an understanding and applicability of the results as well as theoretical developments are stressed. Filled with in-depth insight and expert advice, Hedge Funds helps readers make the most of this flexible investment vehicle.

Book Investing in Hedge Funds

Download or read book Investing in Hedge Funds written by Turan Bali and published by Academic Press. This book was released on 2013-06-29 with total page 186 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This book will present a comprehensive view of the risk characteristics, risk-adjusted performances, and risk exposures of various hedge fund indices. It will distinguish itself from other books and journal articles by focusing solely on hedge fund indices and emphasizing tail risk as a predictor of hedge fund index returns. The three chapters in this short book have not been previously published. - Presents new insights about the investability and performance measurement of an investor's final portfolio - Uses most recently developed investable hedge fund indexes to revise previous analyses of indexes - Focuses on 14 distinct types of hedge fund indices with daily data from January 1994 to December 2011

Book Reconsidering Funds of Hedge Funds

Download or read book Reconsidering Funds of Hedge Funds written by Greg N. Gregoriou and published by Academic Press. This book was released on 2012-12-31 with total page 589 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: How will the funds of hedge funds (FoHF) business have to change to survive in the wake of the 2008-2012 financial crisis? This new research provides valuable insight. Reconsidering Funds of Hedge Funds presents the first comprehensive views of UCITS as well as recent trends in due diligence, risk management, and hedge fund deaths and survivors. The book contains original chapters by 22 academics and 16 hedge fund professionals, and includes two sections on performance: one that looks at UCITS FoHF and one that deals with traditional FoHF performance. Most chapters examine aspects of the 2008-2012 financial crisis, and almost every chapter addresses fund of hedge funds' management process before, during, and after the crisis. - Covers recent advances in risk management, due diligence, tail risk, and allocation - Presents an in-depth analysis of UCITs - Balances academic and professional viewpoints

Book Hedge Funds

Download or read book Hedge Funds written by Vikas Agarwal and published by Now Publishers Inc. This book was released on 2005 with total page 85 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Hedge Funds summarizes the academic research on hedge funds and commodity trading advisors. The hedge fund industry has grown tremendously over the recent years. According to some industry estimates, hedge funds have increased from $39 million in 1990 to about $972 million in 2004 and the total number of hedge funds has gone up from 610 to 7,436 over the same period. At the same time, hedge fund strategies have changed significantly. In 1990 the macro strategy dominated the industry while in 2004 the equity hedge strategy had the largest share of the market. There has also been a shift in the type of investor in hedge funds. In the early 1990's the typical investor was a high net-worth individual investor, today the typical investor is an institutional investor. Thus, the hedge fund market has not only grown tremendously, but the nature of the market has changed. Despite the enormous growth of this industry, there is limited information available on hedge funds. As a result, there is a need for rigorous research from both the investors' and regulators' point of view. Investors need research to better understand their investment and their risk exposure. This research also helps investors recognize the extent of diversification benefits hedge funds offer in combination with investments in traditional asset classes, such as stocks and bonds. Regulators can use this research to identify situations where regulation may be needed to protect investors' interests and to understand the impact hedge funds trading strategies have on the stability of the financial markets. The first part of Hedge Funds summarizes hedge fund performance, including comparisons of risk-return characteristics of hedge funds with those of mutual funds, factors driving hedge fund returns, and persistence in hedge fund performance. The second part reviews research regarding the unique contractual features and characteristics of hedge funds and their influence on the risk-return tradeoffs. The third part reviews the role of hedge funds in a portfolio including the extent of diversification benefits and limitations of standard mean-variance framework for asset allocation. Finally, the authors summarize the research on the biases in hedge fund databases.

Book Tail Risk in Hedge Funds

Download or read book Tail Risk in Hedge Funds written by Vikas Agarwal and published by . This book was released on 2015 with total page pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book Tail Risk Exposures of Hedge Funds

Download or read book Tail Risk Exposures of Hedge Funds written by Caio Almeida and published by . This book was released on 2019 with total page 31 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This paper examines tail risk in the Brazilian hedge fund industry. We rely on a unique data set of daily returns for every hedge fund in Brazil, dead or alive. By employing the universe of hedge funds, we ensure the absence of selection, survivorship, and instant history biases. We estimate tail risk measures based on the cross-section of both equity and hedge-fund returns. We consider three tail risk measures. The first extracts a tail risk measure assuming that the tail of the cross-section distribution has a power law representation, whereas the second and third rely on the expected shortfall of the cross-section distribution under the physical and risk-neutral measures, respectively. We find that the tail risk estimates are very different not only across asset classes (equity vs hedge fund), but also across probability measures (physical vs risk neutral). More interestingly, we also show that, although the hedge fund industry in Brazil seems to exhibit more exposure to equity tail risk, hedge fund tail risk entails higher predictive ability to performance both over time and cross-sectionally.

Book Tail Risk and the Performance of Hedge Funds

Download or read book Tail Risk and the Performance of Hedge Funds written by Astghik Manvelyan and published by . This book was released on 2014 with total page 126 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt:

Book TAIL RISK HEDGING  Creating Robust Portfolios for Volatile Markets

Download or read book TAIL RISK HEDGING Creating Robust Portfolios for Volatile Markets written by Vineer Bhansali and published by McGraw Hill Professional. This book was released on 2013-12-27 with total page 272 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: "TAIL RISKS" originate from the failure of mean reversion and the idealized bell curve of asset returns, which assumes that highly probable outcomes occur near the center of the curve and that unlikely occurrences, good and bad, happen rarely, if at all, at either "tail" of the curve. Ever since the global financial crisis, protecting investments against these severe tail events has become a priority for investors and money managers, but it is something Vineer Bhansali and his team at PIMCO have been doing for over a decade. In one of the first comprehensive and rigorous books ever written on tail risk hedging, he lays out a systematic approach to protecting portfolios from, and potentially benefiting from, rare yet severe market outcomes. Tail Risk Hedging is built on the author's practical experience applying macroeconomic forecasting and quantitative modeling techniques across asset markets. Using empirical data and charts, he explains the consequences of diversification failure in tail events and how to manage portfolios when this happens. He provides an easy-to-use, yet rigorous framework for protecting investment portfolios against tail risk and using tail hedging to play offense. Tail Risk Hedging explores how to: Generate profits from volatility and illiquidity during tail-risk events in equity and credit markets Buy attractively priced tail hedges that add value to a portfolio and quantify basis risk Interpret the psychology of investors in option pricing and portfolio construction Customize explicit hedges for retirement investments Hedge risk factors such as duration risk and inflation risk Managing tail risk is today's most significant development in risk management, and this thorough guide helps you access every aspect of it. With the time-tested and mathematically rigorous strategies described here, including pieces of computer code, you get access to insights to help mitigate portfolio losses in significant downturns, create explosive liquidity while unhedged participants are forced to sell, and create more aggressive yet tail-risk-focused portfolios. The book also gives you a unique, higher level view of how tail risk is related to investing in alternatives, and of derivatives such as zerocost collars and variance swaps. Volatility and tail risks are here to stay, and so should your clients' wealth when you use Tail Risk Hedging for managing portfolios. PRAISE FOR TAIL RISK HEDGING: "Managing, mitigating, and even exploiting the risk of bad times are the most important concerns in investments. Bhansali puts tail risk hedging and tail risk management under a microscope--pricing, implementation, and showing how we can fine-tune our risk exposures, which are all crucial ways in how we can better weather our bad times." -- ANDREW ANG, Ann F. Kaplan Professor of Business at Columbia University "This book is critical and accessible reading for fiduciaries, financial consultants and investors interested in both theoretical foundations and practical considerations for how to frame hedging downside risk in portfolios. It is a tremendous resource for anyone involved in asset allocation today." -- CHRISTOPHER C. GECZY, Ph.D., Academic Director, Wharton Wealth Management Initiative and Adj. Associate Professor of Finance, The Wharton School "Bhansali's book demonstrates how tail risk hedging can work, be concretely implemented, and lead to higher returns so that it is possible to have your cake and eat it too! A must read for the savvy investor." -- DIDIER SORNETTE, Professor on the Chair of Entrepreneurial Risks, ETH Zurich

Book Tail Risks Across Investment Funds

Download or read book Tail Risks Across Investment Funds written by Jerchern Lin and published by . This book was released on 2016 with total page 67 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Managed portfolios are subject to tail risks, which can be either index level (systematic) or fund-specific. Examples of fund-specific extreme events include those due to big bets or fraud. This paper studies the two components in relation to compensation structure in managed portfolios. A simple model generates fund-specific tail risk and its asymmetric dependence on the market, and makes predictions for where such risks should be concentrated. The model predicts that systematic tail risks increase with an increased weight on systematic returns in compensation and idiosyncratic tail risks increase with the degree of convexity in contracts. The model predictions are supported with empirical results. Hedge funds are subject to higher idiosyncratic tail risks and Exchange Traded Funds exhibit higher systematic tail risks. In skewness and kurtosis decompositions, I find that coskewness is an important source for fund skewness, but fund kurtosis is driven by cokurtosis, as well as volatility comovement and residual kurtosis, with the importance of these components varying across fund types. Investors are subject to different sources of skewness and fat tail risks through delegated investments. Volatility based tail risk hedging is not effective for all fund styles and types.

Book Hedge Fund Tail Risk

    Book Details:
  • Author : Monica Billio
  • Publisher :
  • Release : 2016
  • ISBN :
  • Pages : 39 pages

Download or read book Hedge Fund Tail Risk written by Monica Billio and published by . This book was released on 2016 with total page 39 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: This paper develops several risk measures that captures the tail risk of single hedge fund strategies and the tail risk contribution of these hedge fund strategies to the overall portfolio tail risk, conditional on the level of market distress. We show that, during the recent global financial crisis, all the different hedge fund strategies are contributing to the tail risk of the portfolio of hedge funds, mostly because of the hedge fund strategies' exposure to liquidity and credit risk.

Book Modelling the Tail Risk in Private Equities and Hedge Funds

Download or read book Modelling the Tail Risk in Private Equities and Hedge Funds written by Yasuaki Daisai and published by . This book was released on 2014 with total page 24 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: Monthly return distributions of many private equity and hedge funds indices exhibit a set of distinctive statistical properties; such as skewness, fat-tails, and first-order serial correlation; and if these are ignored then the calculation of risk-return performance measures, asset allocation or loss probabilities of portfolios containing such instruments, will be seriously compromised. The aim of this paper is to provide an insight the time-varying tail of the distribution of private equity and hedge fund indices, while taking into account the statistical challenges posed by such asset classes; namely heterogeneity, risk preferences, non-linearities, and significant serial correlation. The results presented have significant implications for risk management, asset managements and investors' perceptions.

Book Hedge Fund Tail Risk

    Book Details:
  • Author : Juha Joenväärä
  • Publisher :
  • Release : 2016
  • ISBN :
  • Pages : 57 pages

Download or read book Hedge Fund Tail Risk written by Juha Joenväärä and published by . This book was released on 2016 with total page 57 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: We decompose hedge fund tail risk into two components: Systematic Conditional Tail Risk (SCTR) arising predictably from equity market exposure, and Idiosyncratic Conditional Tail Risk (ICTR) arising from proprietary investment technology. Using option holdings data, we demonstrate that low-SCTR funds mechanically use protective options. Low-ICTR funds seem to pose tail risk hedging skills, because they use protective options heavily only during the times of market stress. Low-ICTR (Low-SCTR) funds (do not) deliver superior performance. Our results hold after controlling for performance measure manipulation, nonlinearities and autocorrelation in fund returns, and cannot be subsumed by existing skill or risk measures.

Book Fat Tail Risk in Portfolios of Hedge Funds and Traditional Investments

Download or read book Fat Tail Risk in Portfolios of Hedge Funds and Traditional Investments written by Jean-Francois Bacmann and published by . This book was released on 2004 with total page 29 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: We analyse the risk of portfolios mixing hedge funds, stocks and bonds. The risk of the portfolios is quantified by the Value-at-Risk and the Expected Shortfall derived from the Extreme Value Theory. This approach enables us to take the impact of higher moments into account. We show that the risk of a traditional portfolio is reduced by the inclusion of hedge funds. An optimal weight of 50% hedge funds is found when the traditional portfolio is mostly composed of bonds. In equity dominated portfolios, investors should incorporate as much hedge funds as possible. Furthermore we examine the extremal dependence between funds of hedge funds and stocks or bonds using multivariate Extreme Value Theory. We do not find any significant extremal dependence between hedge funds and bonds. The evidence is more mixed between stocks and funds of hedge funds. Funds of hedge funds without a significant investment in Managed Futures exhibit significant dependence in the extreme with the stock market. The August 1998 event linked to the Russian crisis and the LTCM failure is the cause of this dependence.