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Investment Education Series - 1/3: "Diversification - A Useful Tool, Until You Need It!"

   I found a Series of Articles from Wealth Management Expert, Author, and Professor, Sharath Sury. There are three Ezinearticles written by Professor Sury, covering Diversification, ALM, and Risk Measurement. I felt Sharath Sury's articles are a must read for anyone wanting to sharpen their knowledge on important investing techniques. This entry includes Professor Sury's "Diversification - A Useful Tool, Until You Need It!" article. i will follow this article in a later post with "Risk Measurement - A Multi-Dimensional Concept!". 

** If you find any of the articles in this series informative or useful, please leave a comment for author Sharath Sury on Blog.SuryOnline.net !


 Diversification - A Useful Tool, Until You Need It!
By Sharath Sury 

Posted On: SURYONLINE.NET at 3/11/2010 6:18 PM

 
 
 
Professor Sharath SuryWe have all been taught about themerits of diversification in investments. It is a variation of the oldadage, "Don't put all your eggs in one basket." 
 
Indeed, professional investment managers are trained to develop portfolios according to the tenets of Modern Portfolio Theory (MPT). MPT traces its roots to the work of Harry Markowitz and his seminal writings on "Portfolio Selection." In his pioneering research, Markowitz was able to demonstrate the mathematical basis for diversification.
 
Essentially, Markowitz showed that selecting assets that have a positive expected return but exhibit low or (preferably) negative correlation to one another produces a combined portfolio that retains the positive expected return properties, but with lowered risk (as defined by variance).
 
Theoretically, this result arises due to the presence of at least two major sources of risk: nonsystematic (or unique) risk and systematic (or market) risk. While it is very difficult to eliminate market risk, it is possible to reduce the risks associated with unique investment assets. By combining investment assets that are subject to certain specific, unique risks with other investment assets that are subject to other unique risks, it may be possible to reduce the overall risk of the combined portfolio.
 
For the past several decades, this has been the mantra to which all investment managers adhered. Unfortunately, recent experiences in the capital markets have led both academics and professional investment practitioners to rethink portfolio construction. With the increasing interconnectedness of global markets and investment pools, we have seen that correlation structures among various investment assets are not always stable.
 
As a result, investment managers need to be exceedingly careful in constructing portfolios that are able to withstand the dynamic nature of correlations, especially as the market experiences large disturbances. These "disturbances" are becoming much more commonplace: the Asian currency crisis of 1997, failure of the major hedge fund "Long Term Capital Management" in 1998, the burst of the "dot-com" bubble in 2000/2001, the terrorist attacks of 2001, the burst of the real estate bubble in 2007/2008, and the credit crisis of 2008/2009. In nearly every case, correlation structures among various assets increased at precisely the time when investors needed protection the most.
 
The best portfolio construction techniques have an appreciation for the fact that correlation structures may change during different "states of the world" or regimes. By incorporating these state-dependent correlation structures into portfolio design and optimization, investment managers can move to better protect portfolios during times of market distress.
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Professional Summary for Asset Allocation and Risk Management Expert, Sharath Sury:
 
Sharath M. Sury - Founder and Executive Director of the Sury Initiative for Financial Innovation & Risk Management (SIFIRM) at Santa Clara University, Sharath Sury devotes his time and energy to bringing together thought leaders who can address the development of real-world solutions to the current economic climate. Sharath Sury has worked with some of the brightest and most experienced experts in finance and risk management and aims to bring a greater sense of ethics and responsibility to his profession. Through his efforts, Professor Sury has established this invaluable forum for the research and discussion of new developments in the world of economics and finance and has attracted a renewed spirit of innovation to the industry. Sharath Sury also serves as an Adjunct Professor of Economics at the University of California and Adjunct Professor of Finance at DePaul University in Chicago. Sharath Sury's interest and experience in wealth management began as an Associate and later Vice President at Goldman, Sachs & Co. He later founded and worked at S4 Capital, where he earned numerous accolades for his work.
 
 

 

Article Source: Sury, Sharath "Diversification - A Useful Tool, Until You Need It!." Diversification - A Useful Tool, Until You Need It!. 9 Mar. 2010 EzineArticles.com. 31 Mar. 2010 <http://ezinearticles.com/?Diversification- - - A- Useful- Tool,- Until- You- Need- It!&id=3883169>.

 

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Visit Sharath Sury At:
 
http://blog.suryonline.net

http://Everything-Finance.net
http://www.focus.com/profiles/sharath-sury/public/
 

Diversification - A Useful Tool, Until You Need It! Read what they don't tell you!

Diversification - A Useful Tool, Until You Need It!
By Sharath Sury 

We have all been taught about the merits of diversification in investments. It is a variation of the old adage, "Don't put all your eggs in one basket."

Indeed, professional investment managers are trained to develop portfolios according to the tenets of Modern Portfolio Theory (MPT). MPT traces its roots to the work of Harry Markowitz and his seminal writings on "Portfolio Selection." In his pioneering research, Markowitz was able to demonstrate the mathematical basis for diversification.

Essentially, Markowitz showed that selecting assets that have a positive expected return but exhibit low or (preferably) negative correlation to one another produces a combined portfolio that retains the positive expected return properties, but with lowered risk (as defined by variance).

Theoretically, this result arises due to the presence of at least two major sources of risk: nonsystematic (or unique) risk and systematic (or market) risk. While it is very difficult to eliminate market risk, it is possible to reduce the risks associated with unique investment assets. By combining investment assets that are subject to certain specific, unique risks with other investment assets that are subject to other unique risks, it may be possible to reduce the overall risk of the combined portfolio.

For the past several decades, this has been the mantra to which all investment managers adhered. Unfortunately, recent experiences in the capital markets have led both academics and professional investment practitioners to rethink portfolio construction. With the increasing interconnectedness of global markets and investment pools, we have seen that correlation structures among various investment assets are not always stable.

In fact, assets that typically exhibit low correlation with one another can dramatically change direction and begin exhibiting increased correlation during periods of market distress. The increased correlation leads to a reduction in the power of diversification and thus to increased risk in the overall portfolio. Unfortunately, this upward shift in correlation happens at exactly the time when an investor needs correlation the most: market distress.

As a result, investment managers need to be exceedingly careful in constructing portfolios that are able to withstand the dynamic nature of correlations, especially as the market experiences large disturbances. These "disturbances" are becoming much more commonplace: the Asian currency crisis of 1997, failure of the major hedge fund "Long Term Capital Management" in 1998, the burst of the "dot-com" bubble in 2000/2001, the terrorist attacks of 2001, the burst of the real estate bubble in 2007/2008, and the credit crisis of 2008/2009. In nearly every case, correlation structures among various assets increased at precisely the time when investors needed protection the most.

The best portfolio construction techniques have an appreciation for the fact that correlation structures may change during different "states of the world" or regimes. By incorporating these state-dependent correlation structures into portfolio design and optimization, investment managers can move to better protect portfolios during times of market distress.

Sharath M. Sury - Founder and Executive Director of the Sury Initiative for Financial Innovation & Risk Management (SIFIRM) at Santa Clara University, Sharath Sury devotes his time and energy to bringing together thought leaders who can address the development of real-world solutions to the current economic climate. Sharath Sury has worked with some of the brightest and most experienced experts in finance and risk management and aims to bring a greater sense of ethics and responsibility to his profession. Through his efforts, Professor Sury has established this invaluable forum for the research and discussion of new developments in the world of economics and finance and has attracted a renewed spirit of innovation to the industry. Sharath Sury also serves as an Adjunct Professor of Economics at the University of California and Adjunct Professor of Finance at DePaul University in Chicago. Sharath Sury's interest and experience in wealth management began as an Associate and later Vice President at Goldman, Sachs & Co. He later founded and worked at S4 Capital, where he earned numerous accolades for his work.

SOURCE: http://ezinearticles.com/?Diversification---A-Useful-Tool,-Until-You-Need-It!&id=3883169

NEW!! Analytic Due Diligence Using an Alpha Cost Index

Analytic Due Diligence Using an Alpha Cost Index 

Posted On: 

Founder and Chief Executive Officer of the Sury Initiative for Financial Innovation & Risk Management (SIFIRM) at Santa Clara University in California’s Silicon Valley, Sharath Sury devotes his time and energy to the development of real-world solutions to the current economic climate. Sharath Sury has worked with some of the brightest and most experienced experts in finance and risk management through SIFIRM and aims to bring a greater sense of ethics and responsibility to his profession. Through his efforts with SIFIRM, Sharath Sury has established an invaluable forum for the research and discussion of new developments in the world of economics and finance and has attracted a renewed spirit of innovation to the industry.

Issue
Effective portfolio managers recognize that not all returns are created equally.

Examination
Investment strategies can deliver returns that are the result of systematic (market or beta) exposures, nonsystematic (skill or alpha) exposures, and random variation. The relative proportions of alpha, beta, and randomness vary across strategies and even within strategies as they evolve over time. Historically, most investment products have bundled alpha and beta. However, as low-cost, investable proxies for beta grow more pervasive, it is increasingly important for portfolio managers to consider only those actively managed products that are truly delivering incremental alpha. In this article, we introduce a new measure that adjusts product fees to account for the level of alpha delivered—the Alpha Cost Index (ACI).

Conclusion
The ACI levels the playing field by penalizing products that charge active management fees but deliver the preponderance of their returns from beta exposures; thus serving as a useful ranking tool for due diligence.

Keywords: hedge funds, alpha, beta, fees, due diligence

JEL Classifications: G10, G19

Working Paper Series

Date posted: October 06, 2009 ; Last revised: November 04, 2009

Suggested Citation

Sury, Sharath M. and Sury, Manda B, Analytic Due Diligence Using an Alpha Cost Index (April 16, 2006). Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=1482904

Contact Information
Sharath M. Sury (Contact Author)
Santa Clara University ( email )
500 El Camino Real
Santa Clara, CA 95053
United States
HOME PAGE:

University of California
( email )
Santa Cruz, CA 95064
United States

Manda B Sury
DePaul University - Department of Finance ( email )
1 East Jackson Blvd.
Chicago, IL 60604-2287
United States

Disclosures and References Source: http://www.manyworlds.com/exploreco.aspx?coid=CO31104305960

Learn More About Sharath Sury And Read His Latest Finance Articles

SOURCE: http://www.manyworlds.com/exploreco.aspx?coid=CO31104305960


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