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Introduction

This document outlines the objectives, grading, and topics of a course on portfolio management and alternative investments. The main objectives are to provide hands-on problems in portfolio investment processes and quantitative trading. Students will be graded based 50% on a term test and 50% on assignments, a project, and presentations. The course aims to bridge theory and practice in portfolio construction, management, and performance evaluation. It will also cover risk management, behavioral finance, and other selected topics.

Uploaded by

Zahidul Islam
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© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
14 views

Introduction

This document outlines the objectives, grading, and topics of a course on portfolio management and alternative investments. The main objectives are to provide hands-on problems in portfolio investment processes and quantitative trading. Students will be graded based 50% on a term test and 50% on assignments, a project, and presentations. The course aims to bridge theory and practice in portfolio construction, management, and performance evaluation. It will also cover risk management, behavioral finance, and other selected topics.

Uploaded by

Zahidul Islam
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Portfolio Management &

Alternative Investments

Fall 2023
Course Objectives
 This is a practice-oriented course based on
quantitative analytical skills.

 Two Main Objectives


 Hands-on problems for the process of

portfolio investment
 Quantitative trading in the real market

Fall 2023
Grading
 Term Test (50%)
 You need at least 50% on the test to pass
the course

 Assignments & Project (50%)


 1 comprehensive report
 1 or 2 presentation
 computer assignments

Fall 2023
Dual Purposes
 This course tries to bridge the gap between
theories and practices and prepares you to
start a career as a quantitative
analyst/portfolio manager.

 This course prepares you for being a DIY


investor.

Fall 2023
Finance
Government

Capital
Firms Investors
Markets

Financing Investing

Financial Institution

Fall 2023
What have you learned in
your prerequisites?
 Mean-Variance Analysis
 Asset Allocation

 Utility Function

 Efficient Frontier

 Two-Fund Separation Theorem

 CAPM
 APT
 Efficient Market Hypothesis (EMH)

Fall 2023
What will we learn in
this course?
 The course builds on the theories and models you
developed in the prerequisite course.
 Review of statistics & finance

 Optimal portfolio construction & management

 Hedge fund construction & management

 Active portfolio management

 Performance evaluation

 Behavioral Finance

 Selected topics: risk management

Fall 2023
The Nature of This Course
 A “portfolio” of a variety of theories, models,
skills, perspectives, etc.
 Practical (computer work: Excel & VBA)
 Intensive Use of Websites & Additional Sources
 Download data & perform analysis on weekly

basis
 Learn from assigned websites & articles

 “Soft” Skills
 Teamwork

 Communication/Presentation
Fall 2023
Policy
 Show up on time and participate in class discussion
 There are very important project & exam materials that are not
covered in any textbooks
 2- or 3-person groups for assignments and project
 Everyone participates in presentations

 Your project mark will be evaluated not only by myself


but also by your peer group members
 If two members vote you out of the group during the
course of the project, you will be removed from the
group and assigned a brand-new sector and work
alone.
Fall 2023
A Basic Review of
Finance & Statistics

Fall 2023
Three Basic Principles about
Money
 More is better than less
 Sooner is better than later
 Sure is better than risky

C t +1 𝐶 𝑡 +2
Pt = + ¿¿
1+ 𝑅

Fall 2023
Return and Risk
 Return and risk are the two fundamental
concepts in finance.

 How to measure return?

 How to measure risk?

 What is the relation between return and risk?

Fall 2023
Next Period Return
 With intermediate dividend payment
𝑃 𝑡 +1 + 𝐷 𝑡 +1 − 𝑃𝑡
𝑅𝑡 +1 =
𝑃𝑡
 No intermediate dividend payment
𝑃 𝑡 +1 − 𝑃 𝑡
𝑅𝑡 +1 =
𝑃𝑡
 Percentage return
 Excess return/Risk premium = Rt+1 - Rf

Fall 2023
Risky Return

𝑃 𝑡 +1 − 𝑃 𝑡
𝑅𝑡 +1 =
𝑃𝑡
 Investments are risky.
 Pt+1 is not known at time t; hence Rt+1 is not
known at time t.
 How do we capture the randomness of Rt+1?
 Statistics --- expected return & variance
Fall 2023
Random Variable
 A random variable is a variable whose value
(outcome) is uncertain.
 Examples
 the outcome of a coin flip

 tomorrow’s stock price

 Each possible outcome is associated with a


probability

Fall 2023
Probability Distribution
 A random variable is represented by its
probability distribution, i.e. the set or list of all
possible values of the random variable, with
their associated probabilities.
 If the number of possible values of a random
variable is finite, we use discrete distributions.
 If the number of possible values of a random
variable is infinite, we use continuous
distributions.
Fall 2023
Discrete Distribution
If you roll a fair die, there are six possible outcomes,
with equal probability.
0.18
0.16
0.14
Probability

0.12
0.10
0.08
0.06
0.04
0.02
0.00
1 2 3 4 5 6
Outcome

Fall 2023
The Probability Distribution of A
Standard Normal

Fall 2023
Expected Return and Variance from
Normal Distribution

Fall 2023
Sample Statistics
 Since we don’t observe expected return and
risk, we need to estimate the mean and
variance of returns in our sample returns.

 How do we estimate them?


Historical returns

Fall 2023
Sample Mean
 If we observe a history of stock returns
up to time T, i.e., R1,…,RT, then we can
compute the sample mean using the
following formula:

 Sample mean is an unbiased estimate


of expected return

Fall 2023
Sample Variance
 Similarly we can compute sample
variance from these historical returns.

 Standard deviation or volatility (R) is


the square root of variance, as the
unbiased estimate of risk

Fall 2023
Sample Covariance &
Correlation Coefficient
 Suppose we observe historical returns for two stocks:
R1: R11 ,…,R1T
R2 : R21 ,…,R2T
then the sample covariance is

 Correlation Coefficient [-1, 1]:

Fall 2023
Example
IBM (R1)MSFT (R2) APPL (R3)
Jan. 10% 20% -10%
Feb. 0% 10% 20%
Mar. -10% -20% 10%
Apr. 20% 30% -20%
 Calculate the expected returns, variance &

covariance, and correlation coefficients


 Calculate the expected return and variance

for a portfolio with weights 0.3, 0.3, 0.4.


Fall 2023
Expected Return of A Portfolio
 So far we are concerned with the statistics of a single
risky asset.
 How will these statistics behave for a portfolio?
 Adding more assets to a portfolio does not make the
calculation of expected return more difficult.
 E[Rp] = w1E[R1] + … + wnE[Rn]
for a portfolio p having n assets with weight wi, i = 1,…,n

Fall 2023
Variance of A Portfolio
 But for the variance of a portfolio…
If there are three risky assets, R1, R2 and R3 in
the portfolio, Rp = w1R1 + w2R2 + w3R3
Var(Rp) =

 When n =10,

Fall 2023
More on Covariance
 As you can see, this procedure rapidly
becomes tedious as we add more assets in
our portfolio.

 So we need a more efficient way to represent


and manipulate large amounts of data.

Fall 2023
Variance-Covariance Matrix
 It is more efficient to write variance-covariance
between assets in matrix form:
R1 R2 R3

[ ]
R1 𝜎 21 𝜎 12 𝜎 1 3
2
R2 𝜎21 𝜎2 𝜎23
2
R3 𝜎 31 𝜎 3 2 𝜎 3

 Notice that the variances appear in the diagonal.


Also note that this matrix is symmetric.
 For N = 100,
Fall 2023
A Covariance Matrix
 The matrix in the previous slide has three
rows and three columns. Therefore, we
would say its dimension is 3 x 3.

 Similarly, for n variables, we would have a


n x n matrix.

Fall 2023
Matrix Notation
 R is a column vector of expected returns
 w is a column vector of portfolio weights
 ∑ is the covariance matrix

Fall 2023

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