Abstract

Recent research findings suggest long-term investor utility benefits through scaling expected returns by recent realized volatility. We test for utility gains to volatility timing using a utility regime-based methodology to classify investor-specific market investment regimes based solely on recent realized volatility levels. Under this framework we find limited informational content in using recent realized volatility to forecast utility regimes for the market index. To reconcile our findings we replicate work by Moreira and Muir (2017) and find that their reported Sharpe ratio gains through volatility-managing the US market factor do not appear to be statistically significant. We find that their scheme under-performs buy and hold in terms of Sharpe ratio over 30 of the 70 twenty year sub-periods in our sample (58 out of 70 for an un-leveraged investor). Furthermore, the historical out-performance of volatility management for the market index is highly sensitive to the timing of re-balancing within a month, suggesting that the strategy may not be robust to the precise timing of key market events relative to volatility changes. Strategy adopters should be aware that this timing is not guaranteed to line up favorably over future investment periods.

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