Global Asset Allocation: The Case For International Investment

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
1 Expectations of Equity Risk Premia, Volatility, and Asymmetry: From a Corporate Finance Perspective John R. Graham Duke University, Durham, NC USA
Advertisements

Alternative Investments “Outlook for the Investment Management Industry” San Antonio October 17, 2007 Bank Depository User Group Meeting.
Portfolio Selection with Higher Moments Campbell R. Harvey Duke University, Durham, NC USA National Bureau of Economic Research, Cambridge, MA USA
Vicentiu Covrig 1 Portfolio management. Vicentiu Covrig 2 “ Never tell people how to do things. Tell them what to do and they will surprise you with their.
1 Global Asset Allocation: The Case For International Investment Global Asset Allocation: The Case For International Investment Campbell R. Harvey, Ph.D.,
Agenda Why is the Pension Investor different? The journey, the destination or both? Saver or Investor? Tailored Solutions Managing the journey to the destination.
Investing in volatile times Investing fundamentals and how MLC’s portfolios are designed to weather market volatility December 2008.
The Tactical and Strategic Value of Commodity Futures Claude B. Erb Campbell R. Harvey TCW, Los Angeles, CA USA Duke University, Durham, NC USA NBER, Cambridge,
The 7Twelve ® Portfolio Craig L. Israelsen, Ph.D
The Montgomery Institute Investment Proposal December 2013.
The Capital Preservation Challenge May %-20%-15%-10%-5%0%5%10%15%20%25%30%35% Market returns Wealth Utility Utility.
Managing Higher Moments in Hedge Fund Allocation Campbell R. Harvey Duke University, Durham, NC USA National Bureau of Economic Research, Cambridge, MA.
City of Hallandale Beach DB Plan Update November 17, 2014.
Chapter 29 – Applications of Futures and Options BA 543 Financial Markets and Institutions.
Endowment Trustees Report to Executive Board (Long-Term Investment Fund) Dan Bradbury – Senior Trustee Saturday – April 9, ET #
Copyright Campbell R. Harvey. All Worldwide Rights Reserved. 1 The Financial and Economic Impact of September 11, 2001 Campbell R. Harvey Duke University,
GATE April 15, 2002 Economic, Financial and Political Risk in Portfolio and Direct Investment Campbell R. Harvey Duke University, Durham, NC National Bureau.
Historical Perspective on International Equity Returns Campbell R. Harvey Duke University, Durham, NC USA National Bureau of Economic Research, Cambridge.
Copyright John R. Graham and Campbell R. Harvey. 1 Expectations of Equity Risk Premia, Volatility, and Asymmetry: From a Corporate Finance Perspective.
1 Managing Geopolitical Risk In Investment Decision Making Campbell R. Harvey Duke University and National Bureau of Economic Research Sixth Global Fixed.
Chapter 18 Asset Allocation. Copyright ©2014 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved.18-2 Chapter Objectives Explain how diversification among assets.
1 The Benefits of Hedge Funds The First Seoul International Derivatives Securities Conference Thomas Schneeweis & Vassilis Karavas August 28, 2003.
1 Global Asset Allocation: Global Asset Allocation: Fund Age and Hedge Fund Returns Finance 453: Global Asset Allocation and Stock Selection Campbell R.
Copyright © 2017, 2014, 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. All Rights Reserved Personal Finance SIXTH EDITION Chapter 18 Asset Allocation.
1 Rational International Investment Campbell R. Harvey, Ph.D., Professor, Duke University WHU Campus for Finance “Rationality.
MEMBERS Horizon – The Value of Risk Control
Money Talks: Money Making Secrets Your Bank Will Never Tell You!
Investing in Financial Assets
Pricing Risk.
The Third Quarter in Review
Historical Perspective on International Equity Returns
Portfolio Selection (chapter 8)
Chapter 18 Asset Allocation
Chapter Ten Some Lessons from Capital Market History
Review Fundamental analysis is about determining the value of an asset. The value of an asset is a function of its future dividends or cash flows. Dividends,
Chapter 19 Asset Allocation.
Review Fundamental analysis is about determining the value of an asset. The value of an asset is a function of its future dividends or cash flows. Dividends,
Valuation Campbell R. Harvey, Ph.D., Professor, Duke University
Risk, Return, and Portfolio Allocation
Valuation Campbell R. Harvey, Ph.D., Professor, Duke University
Managing Geopolitical Risk In Investment Decision Making
Asset Allocation and Geopolitical Risk Analysis
Historical Perspective on U.S. Asset Returns
The Term Structure and Economic Growth: The Recession of 2001
2017 Annual Market Review.
Campbell R. Harvey Duke University, Durham, NC USA
The U.S. Risk Premium Campbell R. Harvey
Portfolio Selection with Higher Moments
Historical Perspective on International Equity Returns
Estimation Error and Portfolio Optimization
The U.S. Risk Premium Campbell R. Harvey
2018 Annual Market Review.
The swing of risk/return
2017 Annual Market Review.
Historical Perspective on U.S. Asset Returns
Historical Perspective on U.S. Asset Returns
Introduction to Risk, Return, and the Historical Record
Asset Allocation and Geopolitical Risk Analysis
Resource Credit Income Fund
Asset Allocation and Geopolitical Risk Analysis
Asset Allocation and Geopolitical Risk Analysis
LO 5-1 Compute various measures of return on multi-year investments.
Asset Allocation and the Use of Hedge Funds
2018 Annual Market Review.
2018 Annual Market Review.
Managing Geopolitical Risk In Investment Decision Making
Managing Geopolitical Risk In Investment Decision Making
Estimation Error and Portfolio Optimization
Top Down Investing Bottom-up Approach Top-Down Approach
2018 Annual Market Review.
Presentation transcript:

Global Asset Allocation: The Case For International Investment Global Asset Allocation and Stock Selection Global Asset Allocation: The Case For International Investment Campbell R. Harvey Duke University, Durham, NC USA National Bureau of Economic Research, Cambridge MA USA Cam.harvey@duke.edu +1 919.660.7768 office || +1 919.271.8156 mobile http://www.duke.edu/~charvey

The Plan International track record Returns and diversification Long horizon vs. short horizon What can we expect from U.S. equities? What to expect from international? Alternative views: dynamic strategies, hedge funds Research frontier – changing views of diversification Importance of GPR

The International Track Record U.S. Investments Versus Non-U.S. Equities Wilshire Mid Cap Thirty Year Treasury STRIP Twenty Year Treasury STRIP Wilshire Large Cap Wilshire 5000 Ten Year Treasury STRIP EAFE X-Japan Wilshire Small Cap Seven Year Treasury STRIP MBS Credit Five Year Treasury STRIP Aggregate Government EAFE Three Year Treasury STRIP Two Year STRIP One Year Treasury STRIP Source: Erb and Harvey (2004)

Returns and Diversification Data from MSCI

Returns and Diversification Data from IFC

Returns and Diversification Data from MSCI

Returns and Diversification Data from MSCI

Returns and Diversification Data from MSCI

Returns and Diversification Data from MSCI

Returns and Diversification Data from IFC

Returns and Diversification Data from MSCI

Returns and Diversification Data from IFC

Returns and Diversification Data from IFC and MSCI

The Long Horizon Data from Dimson, Marsh and Stauton (2002)

The Long Horizon Data from Dimson, Marsh and Stauton (2002)

The Long Horizon Data from Dimson, Marsh and Stauton (2002)

The Long Horizon Data from Dimson, Marsh and Stauton (2002)

What to Expect Data from Dimson, Marsh and Stauton (2002)

What to Expect Source: Goldman Sachs (2002)

What to Expect Ten-year risk premium around 3.5% and stable whereas one-year risk premium quite variable 10-year premium 1-year premium Source: Graham and Harvey (2005)

What to Expect U.S. Equity and Bond Returns are Positively Correlated Source: Erb and Harvey (2004)

What to Expect World Real Equity and Real Bond Returns are Positively Correlated Source: Erb and Harvey (2004)

What to Expect Inflation Negatively Related to Real Bill Returns Source: Erb and Harvey (2004)

What to Expect Inflation Negatively Related to Real Intermediate Bond Returns Source: Erb and Harvey (2004)

What to Expect Inflation Negatively Related to Real Bond Returns Source: Erb and Harvey (2004)

What to Expect Inflation Negatively Related to Real Equity Returns Source: Erb and Harvey (2004)

What to Expect Inflation Negatively Related to Real International Bill Returns Source: Erb and Harvey (2004)

What to Expect Inflation Negatively Related to Real International Bill Returns Source: Erb and Harvey (2004)

What to Expect Inflation Negatively Related to Real International Equity Returns Source: Erb and Harvey (2004)

What to Expect Inflation Negatively Related to Real International Equity Returns Source: Erb and Harvey (2004)

Alternative Vehicles Alternate Asset Classes Often Involve Implicit or Explicit Options Source: Naik (2002)

Alternative Vehicles Alternate Asset Classes Often Involve Implicit or Explicit Options Source: Naik (2002)

Alternative Vehicles Alternate Asset Classes Often Involve Implicit or Explicit Options Source: Naik (2002)

Alternative Vehicles Alternate Asset Classes Often Involve Implicit or Explicit Options Source: Naik (2002)

Alternative Vehicles Alternate Asset Classes Often Involve Implicit or Explicit Options Source: Figure 5 from Mitchell & Pulvino (2000)

Alternative Vehicles Alternate Asset Classes Often Involve Implicit or Explicit Options 6 4 2 Event Driven Index Returns -15 -10 -5 5 10 -2 -4 LOWESS fit -6 -8 Source: Naik (2002) Russell 3000 Index Returns

Rethinking Risk Traditional models maximize expected returns for some level of volatility Is volatility a complete measure of risk?

Rethinking Risk Much interest in downside risk, asymmetric volatility, semi-variance, extreme value analysis, regime-switching, jump processes, ...

Rethinking Risk ... These are just terms that describe the skewness in returns distributions. Most asset allocation work operates in two dimensions: mean and variance -- but skew is important for investors. Examples:

Rethinking Risk 1. The $1 lottery ticket. The expected value is $0.45 (hence a -55%) expected return. Why is price so high? Lottery delivers positive skew, people like positive skew and are willing to pay a premium

2. High implied vol in out of the money OEX put options. Rethinking Risk 2. High implied vol in out of the money OEX put options. Why is price so high? Option limits downside (reduces negative skew). Investors are willing to pay a premium for assets that reduce negative skew

3. Some stocks that trade with seemingly “too high” P/E multiples Rethinking Risk 3. Some stocks that trade with seemingly “too high” P/E multiples Why is price so high? Enormous upside potential (some of which is not well understood) Investors are willing to pay a premium for assets that produce positive skew [Note: Expected returns could be small or negative!]

Rethinking Risk Source: Harvey and Siddique (2000)

Rethinking Risk Data from MSCI

Rethinking Risk Data from IFC

U.S. Has Become a Riskier Global Investment The U.S. has become much more risky High sensitivity to some GPRs Disagreement on strength of economy Financial information less credible These factors suggest shifting exposures from equity to safer fixed income

U.S. Has Become a Riskier Global Investment ICRG Political Risk Data from PRS

U.S. Has Become a Riskier Global Investment ICRG Political Risk Data from PRS

U.S. Has Become a Riskier Global Investment ICRG Political Risk Data from PRS

U.S. Has Become a Riskier Global Investment Risk Ratings December 2002 Data from PRS

U.S. Has Become a Riskier Global Investment Risk Ratings May 2001 Data from PRS

U.S. Has Become a Riskier Global Investment Higher risk means equity investors require a higher rate of return Risk Ratings from Institutional Investor

U.S. Has Become a Riskier Global Investment Equation implies an increase in the medium-term risk premium of 240bp This helps explain the recent decline in the equity market This helps explain the recent behavior of the U.S. dollar This helps explain the slow down in real investment (hurdle rates are up)

Conclusions International investment is mainly about returns – diversification, while important, is often “oversold” Expected returns depend on fundamental values today – not just historical return performance. U.S. risk has increased suggesting a reallocation from equity to fixed income

All articles on www.duke.edu/~charvey Readings All articles on www.duke.edu/~charvey The Drivers of Expected Returns in International Markets (2000) Global Tactical Asset Allocation (2001) with Magnus Dahlquist The Term Structure of Equity Risk Premia (2004) with Claude Erb