Abstract

This study examines the portfolio optimization problem by exploiting daily data of 10 international Exchange Trade Funds (ETF) from 2012 to 2022. We extend the Black-Litterman (BL) approach using ARMA-GARCH-copula-based expected returns as a proxy for investor views and use the CVaR metric as a risk measure in the optimization procedure. The BL approach provides a Bayesian methodology for combining the equilibrium returns and the investor views to produce expected returns. We use Regular Vine (R-vine) copula since it provides a flexible multivariate dependency modeling. The suggested approach is compared against the copula-CVaR portfolio, which likewise a BL copula approach avoids excessive corner solutions that many optimization approaches would generate in case of extreme values of estimated parameters. We compare the performance of these two approaches using out-of-sample back-testing against two benchmarks: Mean–Variance optimizations (MV) and equal weights portfolio (EW). To further reduce the sensitivity of considered strategies to input parameters, we evaluate out-of-sample performance at three levels of maximum weight constraints: 30%, 40%, and 50%. Moreover, in this paper, we consider different levels of view confidence—τ in the Black-Litterman model as it significantly affects the obtained results and inferences. We calculate and report the portfolios’ tail risks, maximum drawdown, turnover, and the break-even point for all optimization approaches. Our empirical analysis indicates better performance for the CBL portfolio regarding lower tail risk and higher risk-adjusted returns, and the copula-CVaR portfolio is better regarding lower turnover and higher break-even point.

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