2011 PORTFOLIO MANAGEMENT CONFERENCE
Dynamic Tail Risk Hedging
May 3, 2010
Arne Staal Systematic Strategies | IPRS
PLEASE SEE ANALYST CERTIFICATION(S) AND IMPORTANT DISCLOSURES STARTING AFTER PAGE 21
Conditional Tail Risk: The Known Unknowns and the Unknown Unknowns
Tail risk is typically defined as low-probability extreme moves in asset values Conditional Tail Risk is relatively predictable, however Unpredictable extreme losses are the most severe type of tail risk
Monthly S&P 500 Tail Risk Predicted by Rolling Normal Distribution
Monthly Returns (%)
1 5 .0 0 1 0 .0 0 5 .0 0 Monthly returns (%)
5% VaR events happen 5.2% of the time since 1985
0 .0 0 -5 . 0 0
-10 .00
-15 .00 -20 .00 -25 .00
1985 1988 1991 1994 1997 20 00 2003 2006 2009
Realized losses can be much larger than expected
S P 5 0 0 E x c e s s R e tu rn P re d ic te d 5 % V a R P re d ic te d lo s s if 5 % V a R is re a liz e d
Source: Barclays Capital
Tail Risk Characteristics and Hedging Approaches
Tail Event Characteristics Macro/systemic shocks that lead to large negative returns across asset classes Volatilities rise, absolute correlations increase sharply Flight-to-quality: investors flee to perceived safe haven assets and currencies Liquidity squeeze Tail Hedging Approaches De-risk the portfolio, purchase flight-to-quality instruments Approximate hedging: invest in strategies and asset classes that are negatively correlated to tail risk Dynamic portfolio protection Explicit hedging: purchase option-like hedging instruments
Increasing Protection
Decreasing Cost
Source: Barclays Capital
Outline
There is no unique tail risk hedge for all strategies and portfolios Shaping the higher order distributions of a return profile depends on preferences, costs, capacity, etc. We consider two situations to highlight tail hedging issues and approaches: I. Approximate Hedging: Tail Risk Hedging Overlays for Balanced Portfolios Is tail hedging different from asset allocation? How to choose and size approximate hedges A (dynamic) diversified minimum shortfall hedge overlay for a benchmark portfolio II. Explicit Hedging: Tail Risk Hedging as a Systematic Trading Strategy Tail risk in the FX carry trade Shaping the hedged carry payoff distribution with options Tail hedging as an alpha opportunity
Tail Risk Hedging Overlays for Balanced Portfolios
Diversification versus Tail Hedging
Traditional method of reducing risk is to hold diversified portfolios (across instruments and across asset classes) Traditional diversification can break down in the tails Tail hedging can be explicitly incorporated into allocation/optimization frameworks
But
While there is no explicit cost of hedging through portfolio allocation, there is always an implicit cost since allocation to an attractive asset may be reduced to reduce risk Requires high-dimensional tail risk models and complicated optimization techniques Therefore Hedge tails through a post-allocation overlay approach
Asset Allocation or Hedging?
Asset Class Diversification Is Not Risk Diversification
1 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0 -0.2 Barclays Capital US Agg Barclays Capital Commodities Benchmark S&P 500
40/10/50 portfolio weights Volatility contribution (%) 95% Expected Shortfall contribution (%)
Traditional portfolios are characterized by skewed risk profiles Alternative allocation mechanisms can give very different risk results Asset allocation has its limits as a tail risk mitigation tool
Volatility Risk Diversification Is Not Tail Risk Diversification
1.0 0.8 0.6
Equal (Variance) risk portfolio weights Volatility contribution (%) 95% Expected Shortfall contribution (%)
0.4 0.2 0.0 -0.2 Barclays Capital US Agg Barclays Capital Commodities Benchmark S&P 500
Source: Barclays Capital
Hedging Overlays: Minimum Risk Approach
Tail risk instruments should be selected in the portfolio so that the stress beta is lower than the normal beta
Minimum Risk Hedging
Min Risk (R p RH )
Traditional symmetric hedging approaches aim to neutralize both positive and negative movements Tail risk hedging should focus on reducing extreme risks, not negative returns and volatility in general
Sizing the Hedge: A Beta for Every Occasion
Traditional Beta
Objective: Minimize the variance of the hedged position Traditional betas are widely used but do not target tail properties and treat losses and profits symmetrically Useful if distributions are normal
Downside Beta
Objective: Minimize the downside semi-variance of the hedged position Downside betas target losses explicitly Useful if distributions are skewed
Tail Beta
Source: Barclays Capital
Objective: Minimize the expected shortfall of the hedged position for a given confidence level (VaR) Tail betas explicitly target tail co-movement and expected size of returns on hedging instrument (convexity) Useful if distributions are skewed and fat-tailed
Why Tail Betas?
Tail betas explicitly target two criteria for a good hedge:
E[Return on Portfolio | Tail Episode Hedged Portfolio] E[Return on Hedge | Tail Episode Hedged Portfolio]
Convexity Tail Co-movement
Tail betas can be used as a criteria to select best cost/impact instruments in an intuitive way Tail betas apply to nonlinear, as well as linear instruments, strategies, and portfolios Techniques such as quantile regressions give good results for approximate hedges and allow for dynamic modeling of tail betas
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Hedging Instruments for a 40/10/50 Portfolio
We consider two strategies as tail hedging instruments for a 40/10/50 benchmark portfolio to minimize the monthly average loss below 4% (approx. 5% portfolio VaR)
Long equity volatility, SPVXMP: A Cross Asset Momentum Strategy:
= 0.21, Tail = 0.14
= 0.22, Tail = 0.37
Portfolio and Hedging Instruments
210 190 170 150 130 110 90 70 50 2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006 SPVXMP ER
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
40/10/50 Benchmark Portfolio TR
Source: Barclays Capital
Cross Asset Momentum Strategy ER
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Hedging a 40/10/50 Portfolio With (Dynamic) Tail Betas
Tail Hedging Performance
230 210 190 170 150 130 110 90 70 50 2001
Barclays Capital,
2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011
40/10/50 Benchmark Portfolio TR 40/10/50 + 14% SPVXMP 40/10/50 + 14% SPVXMP + 37% Momentum 40/10/50 + dynamic shortfall rule
Tail Beta hedging approaches reduce downside risk
2001-current 40/10/50 Benchmark Portfolio TR 40/10/50 + 14% SPVXMP 40/10/50 + 14% SPVXMP + 37% Momentum 40/10/50 + dynamic tail beta
Source: Barclays Capital
Mean 3.1% 3.8% 4.3% 6.7%
S.d. ES below -4% 9.2% -7.1% 7.2% -6.1% 7.1% -6.2% 6.4% -4.6%
Drawdown 33.2% 17.6% 13.8% 10.4%
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Tail Risk Hedging as a Systematic Trading Strategy
The FX Carry Trade
FX Carry is one of the most popular investment strategies amongst FX investors Positive long-run excess performance but significant tail risk Short volatility strategy: Carry performs poorly during periods of high volatility and risk aversion
The FX Carry Trade
US Subprime losses reported (Jun 07) Lehman bankruptcy (Sept 08)
FX Carry versus FX Volatility
Carry index 220 200 180 160 20 15 10 5 90 92 94 96 99 01 Carry strategy (lhs) 03 06 08 Implied vol index Volatility index 30 25
230 210 Indexed performance 190 170 150 130 110 90 Jan-90 ERM crisis (Sep 92)
Tech bubble Russian crisis bursts (Mar 01) (Aug 98) Peso crisis (Dec 97)
Bear Stearns sale (Mar 08)
140
Greek bond crisis (Apr 10)
120 100 80
Asian crisis WTC attack (Sept 01) (Oct 97)
Jan-93
Jan-96
Jan-99
Jan-02
Jan-05
Jan-08
Source: Barclays Capital
Tail Risk in FX Carry is realized over very short periods: between September and October 2008, an investor with long exposure to AUD/JPY lost 33% in a little under four weeks
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Understanding FX Carry Returns
We can isolate the carry portfolio risk by decomposing the performance into the pure carry component and movements in spot rates
Decomposition of Returns
Indexed performance 230 210 190 170 150 130 110 90 1990 1992 1994 1996 1998 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 Spot component
Source: Bloomberg, Barclays Capital
Movement in spot rates is the dominant source of tail risk
Yield component provides steady returns
Yield component
Carry return
G-10 passive carry basket consists of nine US dollar pairs and five euro crosses. Pairs are rebalanced monthly, with long positions in the high yielding currencies, funded by short positions in the low yielding currencies
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Option Overlays: Shaping the Downside with Long Puts
FX Carry with Tail Hedge
1 40
Hedged FX Carry Performance
Carry Carry with options 25 10 ATMF delta delta 1.7% 2.4% 0.71 2.6% 2.7% 0.97 3.1% 2.9% 1.10
1 30
1 20
1st half (1999-2005) Annualised return Volatility Sharpe ratio 2nd half (2006 - 2011) Annualised return Volatility Sharpe ratio Full sample (1999-2011) Annualised return Volatility Sharpe ratio Max drawdown Skewness % profitable months Max monthly loss
4.0% 2.9% 1.37
1 10
1 00
-0.1% 6.7% -0.01
1.8% 3.8% 0.48
1.3% 4.7% 0.27
0.4% 5.7% 0.07
90 199 9 20 01 200 3 20 05 A TMF 20 07 25 delta 20 09 10 delta
Carry strategy
2.5% 4.6% 0.55 -14.4% -1.64 0.66 -8.1%
1.7% 3.0% 0.59
2.1% 3.5% 0.60
2.2% 4.1% 0.53
Hedge tail risk in the carry trade by rolling 1m put options on the investment currencies
Source: Barclays Capital
-4.4% -6.8% -11.0% 1.00 0.34 -0.46 0.52 0.54 0.59 -2.1% -2.8% -5.1%
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Option Overlays: Improving the Upside with Short Calls
We consider a long put, covered call strategy that cheapens the cost of the tail hedge and provides income in times of distress Long put is struck ATMF to provide robust downside protection Call strike set to reflect the trade-off between premium earned and the expected cost of the payout A simple Strike Setting Rule: Receive the full amount of pairwise carry available Set the strike as a function of the expected upside potential in spot rate movements
Dynamic Strike Setting
Kt = Ft [1 (Ct + tUpside)]
K = strike, F = forward rate, C = yield, = upside spot volatility and = volatility factor
Hedging the downside
Source: Barclays Capital
Selling the upside
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The Alpha in Tail Hedging
FX Carry with Tail Hedge
140
FX Carry Performance
Carry Carry with options overlay Dynamic strike (lambda) 0.25 0.5 1 1.5 2 0.6% 1.1% 0.57 1.1% 1.7% 2.0% 2.1% 1.2% 1.6% 2.0% 2.2% 0.85 1.07 1.02 0.96
130
120
1st half (1999-2005) Annualised return Volatility Sharpe ratio
4.0% 2.9% 1.37
110 Dynamic strike: standard deviation 100 Dynamic strike: Upside deviation Carry strategy 90 Apr-99 Apr-01 Apr-03 Apr-05 Apr-07 Apr-09
2nd half (2006 - 2011) Annualised return -0.1% Volatility 6.7% Sharpe ratio -0.01 Full sample (1999-2011) Annualised return 2.5% Volatility 4.6% Sharpe ratio 0.55 Max drawdown Skewness % profitable months Max monthly loss
1.9% 2.0% 0.92
2.1% 2.4% 2.4% 2.4% 1.9% 2.2% 2.6% 3.0% 1.09 1.10 0.94 0.78
1.1% 1.5% 0.70
1.4% 2.0% 2.2% 2.2% 1.5% 1.9% 2.2% 2.5% 0.93 1.07 0.98 0.87
Incorporating dynamic tail hedging in the FX carry trade isolates the alpha
Source: Barclays Capital
-14.4% -1.9% -1.2% -1.3% -1.7% -2.4% -1.6 0.2 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.8 0.7 0.6 0.6 0.6 0.6 0.5 -8.1% -1.6% -1.1% -1.1% -1.1% -1.0%
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Intuition: Decomposing FX Carry with Options Overlay
FX Carry with Overlay Decomposition
Indexed performance 140 130 120 110 100 90 1999
2000
2001
2002
2003 Spot
2004
2005 Yield
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
Overlay
Carry Plus Option Overlay
Provide cheap insurance when investment spot rates are trending up
Source: Barclays Capital
Provide income from call selling and put payoffs during unwind episodes
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Concluding Remarks
Concluding Remarks
Tail risk hedging is a complex problem that requires tailored solutions: Identify risks/risk factors Explicit versus approximate hedging Hedging instruments effectiveness and costs Hedging approaches The potential for better investment performance is substantial: Approximate tail hedging in a risk measurement framework can improve portfolio return characteristics Tail betas could be used to warehouse tail risk Explicit tail hedging overlays can be designed to improve overall investment results of individual strategies and asset classes Understanding the return distribution allows for more effective targeting of payoff preferences
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Analyst Certifications and Important Disclosures
Analyst Certification(s) I, Arne Staal, hereby certify (1) that the views expressed in this research report accurately reflect my personal views about any or all of the subject securities or issuers referred to in this research report and (2) no part of our compensation was, is or will be directly or indirectly related to the specific recommendations or views expressed in this research report.Important DisclosuresFor current important disclosures regarding companies that are the subject of this research report, please send a written request to: Barclays Capital Research Compliance, 745 Seventh Avenue, 17th Floor, New York, NY 10019 or refer to https://ecommerce.barcap.com/research/cgi-bin/all/disclosuresSearch.pl or call 212-526-1072.Barclays Capital does and seeks to do business with companies covered in its research reports. As a result, investors should be aware that Barclays Capital may have a conflict of interest that could affect the objectivity of this report. Any reference to Barclays Capital includes its affiliates. Barclays Capital and/or an affiliate thereof (the "firm") regularly trades, generally deals as principal and generally provides liquidity (as market maker or otherwise) in the debt securities that are the subject of this research report (and related derivatives thereof). The firm's proprietary trading accounts may have either a long and / or short position in such securities and / or derivative instruments, which may pose a conflict with the interests of investing customers. Where permitted and subject to appropriate information barrier restrictions, the firm's fixed income research analysts regularly interact with its trading desk personnel to determine current prices of fixed income securities. The firm's fixed income research analyst(s) receive compensation based on various factors including, but not limited to, the quality of their work, the overall performance of the firm (including the profitability of the investment banking department), the profitability and revenues of the Fixed Income Division and the outstanding principal amount and trading value of, the profitability of, and the potential interest of the firms investing clients in research with respect to, the asset class covered by the analyst. To the extent that any historical pricing information was obtained from Barclays Capital trading desks, the firm makes no representation that it is accurate or complete. All levels, prices and spreads are historical and do not represent current market levels, prices or spreads, some or all of which may have changed since the publication of this document. Barclays Capital produces a variety of research products including, but not limited to, fundamental analysis, equity-linked analysis, quantitative analysis, and trade ideas. Recommendations contained in one type of research product may differ from recommendations contained in other types of research products, whether as a result of differing time horizons, methodologies, or otherwise.
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Important Disclosures (continued)
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Important Disclosures (continued)
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Important Disclosures (continued)
This material is distributed in Saudi Arabia by Barclays Saudi Arabia ('BSA'). It is not the intention of the Publication to be used or deemed as recommendation, option or advice for any action (s) that may take place in future. Barclays Saudi Arabia is a Closed Joint Stock Company, (CMA License No. 09141-37). Registered office Al Faisaliah Tower | Level 18 | Riyadh 11311 | Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. Authorised and regulated by the Capital Market Authority, Commercial Registration Number: 1010283024. This material is distributed in Russia by Barclays Capital, affiliated company of Barclays Bank PLC, registered and regulated in Russia by the FSFM. Broker License #177-11850-100000; Dealer License #177-11855-010000. Registered address in Russia: 125047 Moscow, 1st Tverskaya-Yamskaya str. 21. This material is distributed in India by Barclays Bank PLC, India Branch. This material is distributed in Singapore by the Singapore branch of Barclays Bank PLC, a bank licensed in Singapore by the Monetary Authority of Singapore. For matters in connection with this report, recipients in Singapore may contact the Singapore branch of Barclays Bank PLC, whose registered address is One Raffles Quay Level 28, South Tower, Singapore 048583. Barclays Bank PLC, Australia Branch (ARBN 062 449 585, AFSL 246617) is distributing this material in Australia. It is directed at 'wholesale clients' as defined by Australian Corporations Act 2001. IRS Circular 230 Prepared Materials Disclaimer: Barclays Capital and its affiliates do not provide tax advice and nothing contained herein should be construed to be tax advice. Please be advised that any discussion of U.S. tax matters contained herein (including any attachments) (i) is not intended or written to be used, and cannot be used, by you for the purpose of avoiding U.S. tax-related penalties; and (ii) was written to support the promotion or marketing of the transactions or other matters addressed herein. Accordingly, you should seek advice based on your particular circumstances from an independent tax advisor. Copyright Barclays Bank PLC (2011). All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced in any manner without the prior written permission of Barclays Capital or any of its affiliates. Barclays Bank PLC is registered in England No. 1026167. Registered office 1 Churchill Place, London, E14 5HP. Additional information regarding this publication will be furnished upon request.
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