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Efficient Portfolio Frontier - Risk Management - YouTube
Channel: Option Alpha
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Hey everyone, this is Kirk, here again at
optionalpha.com.
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And in this video, we're going to be talking
about the efficient portfolio frontier.
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This is probably one of the more difficult
topics to get across.
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And so, I'm going to try to get it across
in one video.
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It might be a little bit longer than usual.
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But stick with me through this.
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I promise that I'll try to make it as easy
and painless as possible.
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At least, a little bit more painless than
it was for me when I was in school.
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So, the efficient portfolio: Simply a combination
of assets, i.e. a portfolio that has the best
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possible expected level of return for its
level of risk.
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That's all it really is.
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It's the most efficient portfolio that you
can create, right?
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You can create a portfolio of two stocks or
three stocks.
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This is a combination of as many different
stocks with as many different risk features
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that creates the optimum level of risk versus
return.
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So here, every possible combination of risky
assets, without including any holdings in
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risk-free, which are treasuries, can be plotted
onto a risk expected return space to find
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the optimum market portfolio.
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And we're going to go over that.
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So, what it's basically doing is that it's
taking every combination of assets.
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So, you could take stock A and B, and B and
C, and A and C, and all these different combinations,
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and you can plot their risk versus return
onto a graph.
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And you want to choose the one that has the
best possible or most optimal risk versus
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return.
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This efficient frontier in and of itself is
the sloped portion that gives the highest
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expected return for a given level of risk,
not just the lowest risk.
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And that's really important here.
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We're not talking about the highest return
for the lowest risk.
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We're talking about the optimal point at which
each level of risk is equated to a higher
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level of expected return.
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So, visually on this chart, this is what this
efficient frontier looks like.
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It looks like this right here, this green
line that I've drawn.
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So, just as a basis, we're going to look at
this line down here as being levels of risk.
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So, down here at the left, it's going to be
low levels of risk, and up here, it's going
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to be high levels of risk.
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So, as we go out on this chart, we are increasing
our risk.
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Now, on the vertical, we're going to be looking
at the return, right?
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So, down here is low levels of return, returns
of zero.
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Right here is the risk-free security, and
this is going to be the treasury market where
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you can buy treasuries that are virtually
risk-free from the government, guaranteed
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return.
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And then anything above this is going to be
returns that we get outside of the risk-free
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market.
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So, what we're going to do here is we're going
to the plot just different lines.
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So, for example: We could have stocks that
are trading here.
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So, stock A could be right here.
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And it could give us a risk level of here
of this risk level on this chart versus this
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return to the left.
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And you can see that that's actually a pretty
good risk reward to start with, right?
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But what if you could actually go out here?
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You could take on more risk, and your return
would be just slightly higher.
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And you'd have to think to yourself.
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Is that really worth my time and energy?
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I'm taking all a lot more risk for just only
a slightly higher return.
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Again, we move further out.
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We take on more risk.
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But this time, we take on even more return,
expected returns.
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So, for the unit of risk that we're taking,
you can see that we're actually returning
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much more money.
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And then finally, you can have something that's
even more efficient, that we're taking on
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less risk overall, but we have a much higher
expected return.
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So, this jump from this third blue dot to
the fourth is much more of an efficient jump.
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We're taking less risk overall for each unit
of expected return.
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Now, what the problem is with this is that
with all these combinations of different portfolios
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or individual portfolios, notice that here
at this first blue level that for the same
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amount of risk, we can possibly get an even
higher return.
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And you'd notice that because at this blue
level, you can see that the blue is at the
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same risk level as this market portfolio here.
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And at the same risk level, we could be expecting
much higher returns.
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So, you can see there our blue portfolio or
our blue stock is not efficient.
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In fact, it's really under efficient, and
it's really wasting precious time and energy
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here because it's taking on too much risk
and not returning enough money.
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So, this line here, this efficient frontier
is a combination of all the possible securities
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that create the most efficient portfolios.
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And really, it's a line, but it's made up
of a bunch of different portfolios and different
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weights.
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This point here which is the most efficient
portfolio, it has the best return versus risk,
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it has the highest sloping line if you will,
and it's giving you the highest return per
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unit of risk.
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That is the market portfolio.
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And in our case, for the US markets, this
actually happens to be the S&P 500 index.
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Most people don't know that the S&P 500 index
is technically the most efficient portfolio.
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It is the 500 correlated stocks that are most
efficient and give you the best return versus
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risk which is why it's used as a wide benchmark
for the economy and the stock market.
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It's the most efficient portfolio.
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So, that's where the efficient frontier comes
in.
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It's this frontier that gives you all of these
different allocations and gives you the best
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look at your returns versus risk.
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So, again, whenever you see a model asset
allocation portfolio, chances are that they're
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constructed to be relatively efficient in
terms of maximizing risk and reward.
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But if we take this theory above to the extreme,
one could conclude that for each level of
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risk or return, there is a single best portfolio
mix, right?
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We've already proved that.
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Now, just because you have stock A and stock
B in a portfolio, it doesn't mean that stock
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A and C could potentially be less risky and
better for your portfolio.
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Again, this is where the efficient frontier
comes into, right?
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We have this optimal use of portfolio and
its right along this green line here that
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we've drawn.
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These stocks that are inside this green line,
all the blue ones here, are relatively inefficient
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because for the same level of risk, we could
be making much higher returns.
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Again, you can look at it kind of like this,
as a stocks versus bond portfolio, right?
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If you have higher and lower risk on the bottom
scale and potential return higher and lower
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on the vertical scale, you can see that a
conservative portfolio made up of mostly bonds
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is going to be lower risk, but also lower
return.
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A balanced portfolio that's about 60% stocks
and 40% bonds is going to be about middle
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of the road.
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It's going to take on average risk, and it's
going to take on an average potential return.
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And then of course, a 100% equity portfolio
or all stocks is going to be much riskier,
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but it's also going to offer the potential
for much higher returns.
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And this is where that mix comes into place,
where we can mix and match different securities,
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not just stocks and bonds, but millions or
hundreds of stocks in between here and hundreds
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of different bonds.
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So, there's four things to consider, and I'm
going to go over these very, very detailed.
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The efficient frontier is based completely
on the past.
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Correlations will change, and so should your
portfolio.
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Remember that figures from the last 50 years
are going to be different than the next 50
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years, right?
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And this is very easy to understand, right?
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The last 50 years of trading, we didn't have
as many tech and computer and internet companies.
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Now that we're transitioning in the next 50
years, we're going to have much, much more
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of those.
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Those are going to be more efficient, better
for risk reward, possibly, and the portfolio
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is going to adjust and change.
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Actually, the S&P 500 does this automatically.
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It will have times where it throws out stocks
out of the S&P, and have times where it add
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stocks that are more at portfolio as the market
evolves.
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So, every year, there's new data, and the
ideal portfolios change, like we talked about.
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What was the ideal portfolio in 1984 isn't
now.
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So, make sure you're adjusting for the better
Adjusting your portfolio is always a good
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thing.
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You want to throw out the bad and keep in
the good.
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Now, there are limitations on asset classes.
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And investments do track such asset classes.
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For example: I was in the REIT industry which
is real estate investment trust which I think
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is completely different asset class while
others do not.
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So, there are some things that are a little
bit different, and you want to take advantage
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or just understand what kind of investment
classes you're throwing in there.
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Some people think that REIT's, they have exposure
just real estate, when in reality, they could
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have exposure to mortgages or to industrial
complexes or multi-family, whatever the case
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is.
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Remember that their real cost, like management
fees, taxes, brokerage fees, that are not
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taken into account with the efficient frontier,
it's just purely the best mix of stocks.
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So, clearly, these areas have a huge impact
on your bottom line return, but are widely
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variable to the equations.
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So, make sure as always that even though you
think you have the most optimal mix, that
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you look at what securities are being added
to your portfolio and how much they cost you
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both on a fee basis and on tax basis.
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So, as always, I hope you guys really enjoyed
this video.
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I hope it helped clear up what the efficient
frontier is.
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As always, you can share this video right
below, with any of your friends, family, or
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colleagues, on your favorite social network.
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