Abstract

Active portfolio management is typically conducted within constraints that do not allow managers to fully exploit their ability to forecast returns. Constraints on short positions and turnover, for example, are fairly common and materially restrictive. Other constraints, such as market-cap and value/growth neutrality with respect to the benchmark, or economic sector constraints, can further restrict an active portfolio's composition. We derive ex-ante and ex-post correlation relationships that facilitate constrained portfolio performance analysis. The ex-ante relationship is a generalized version of Grinold's (1989) fundamental law of active management, and provides an important strategic perspective on the potential for active management to add value. The ex-post correlation relationships represent a practical decomposition of performance into the success of the return prediction process and the noise associated with portfolio constraints. We verify the accuracy of these relationships with a Monte-Carlo simulation and illustrate their application with equity portfolio examples based on the S&P 500 benchmark.

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call