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Risk parity as an asset allocation technique: evidence from South African capital markets

This paper investigates the asset allocation technique known as Risk Parity, whereby assets are allocated such that they contribute equal amounts of risk to the overall risk of the portfolio. It is a relatively new technique and one which has grown in popularity and stature amongst Hedge Fund and as...

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Main Author: Greig, Nicholas
Other Authors: Van Rensburg, Paul
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Finance and Tax 2016
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access_status_str Open Access
author Greig, Nicholas
author2 Van Rensburg, Paul
author_browse Greig, Nicholas
Van Rensburg, Paul
author_facet Van Rensburg, Paul
Greig, Nicholas
author_sort Greig, Nicholas
collection Thesis
description This paper investigates the asset allocation technique known as Risk Parity, whereby assets are allocated such that they contribute equal amounts of risk to the overall risk of the portfolio. It is a relatively new technique and one which has grown in popularity and stature amongst Hedge Fund and asset managers alike. Academics have recently also come to fore, documenting the flaws with the mean-variance framework and have begun looking towards portfolio construction techniques based solely on predicted risk, not expected return. The prior literature on the topic is exclusively done abroad and finds that an unlevered Risk Parity portfolio, despite being inferior to other portfolios from a return perspective, is superior in terms of its risk-adjusted return, or Sharpe Ratio. Many academics propose the idea of levering up the Risk Parity portfolio so that its standard deviation matches that of another, riskier portfolio. This paper analyses five portfolio strategies, namely an unlevered and levered Risk Parity, a traditional 60/40, a minimum variance and a maximum Sharpe Ratio (tangency) portfolio. The first part of the paper will categorise the equity asset class into the FINDI and RESI indices, as well as using the ALBI and South African Property Index (PROP). The second part of this paper, Test 2, will subcategorize the equity portion of the strategies into Value and Momentum, using style indices, thus testing for evidence of style anomalies on the JSE. It will still use the ALBI and PROP as the other asset classes. The key findings are that for both tests, the unlevered and levered Risk Parity strategies underperform the FTSE/ALSI benchmark over the sample period, concluding that at the given level of risk free rates, Risk Parity as an asset allocation technique is not superior. Furthermore, Test 2 provides superior annualized returns for all but one of the strategies, indicating the possibility of style anomalies on the JSE.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2016
publishDateRange 2016
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/20544 Risk parity as an asset allocation technique: evidence from South African capital markets Greig, Nicholas Van Rensburg, Paul Financial Management This paper investigates the asset allocation technique known as Risk Parity, whereby assets are allocated such that they contribute equal amounts of risk to the overall risk of the portfolio. It is a relatively new technique and one which has grown in popularity and stature amongst Hedge Fund and asset managers alike. Academics have recently also come to fore, documenting the flaws with the mean-variance framework and have begun looking towards portfolio construction techniques based solely on predicted risk, not expected return. The prior literature on the topic is exclusively done abroad and finds that an unlevered Risk Parity portfolio, despite being inferior to other portfolios from a return perspective, is superior in terms of its risk-adjusted return, or Sharpe Ratio. Many academics propose the idea of levering up the Risk Parity portfolio so that its standard deviation matches that of another, riskier portfolio. This paper analyses five portfolio strategies, namely an unlevered and levered Risk Parity, a traditional 60/40, a minimum variance and a maximum Sharpe Ratio (tangency) portfolio. The first part of the paper will categorise the equity asset class into the FINDI and RESI indices, as well as using the ALBI and South African Property Index (PROP). The second part of this paper, Test 2, will subcategorize the equity portion of the strategies into Value and Momentum, using style indices, thus testing for evidence of style anomalies on the JSE. It will still use the ALBI and PROP as the other asset classes. The key findings are that for both tests, the unlevered and levered Risk Parity strategies underperform the FTSE/ALSI benchmark over the sample period, concluding that at the given level of risk free rates, Risk Parity as an asset allocation technique is not superior. Furthermore, Test 2 provides superior annualized returns for all but one of the strategies, indicating the possibility of style anomalies on the JSE. 2016-07-20T12:35:49Z 2016-07-20T12:35:49Z 2016 Master Thesis Masters MCom http://hdl.handle.net/11427/20544 eng application/pdf Department of Finance and Tax Faculty of Commerce University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Financial Management
Greig, Nicholas
Risk parity as an asset allocation technique: evidence from South African capital markets
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Risk parity as an asset allocation technique: evidence from South African capital markets
title_full Risk parity as an asset allocation technique: evidence from South African capital markets
title_fullStr Risk parity as an asset allocation technique: evidence from South African capital markets
title_full_unstemmed Risk parity as an asset allocation technique: evidence from South African capital markets
title_short Risk parity as an asset allocation technique: evidence from South African capital markets
title_sort risk parity as an asset allocation technique evidence from south african capital markets
topic Financial Management
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/20544
work_keys_str_mv AT greignicholas riskparityasanassetallocationtechniqueevidencefromsouthafricancapitalmarkets