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Techniques for Handling Extreme Events in the Context of Portfolio Construction


This presentation, based partly on the book 'Extreme Events: Robust Portfolio Construction in the Presence of Fat Tails', explores
- Why return serives are often 'fat tailed' (and what this means)
- Extreme Value Theory (EVT) and possible refinements
- Modelling joint fat-taied behaviour
- Lessons for portfolio construction.

[as pdf]

Slides
1Techniques for Handling Extreme Events in the Context of Portfolio Construction
2Background
3Agenda
4Agenda
5Modelling fat tails for individual risks
6Many (most?) investment return series are ‘fat-tailed’
7Why are return series often fat-tailed?
8Distributional mixtures of Normal distributions
9Impact of time-varying volatility
10Impact of time-varying volatility: longer-term data
11Crowded trades and leverage
12Selection effects (1)
13Selection effects (2)
14Agenda
15Extreme Value Theory (EVT)
16Restatement of EVT results
17Challenges
18Tail Weighted Maximum Likelihood Estimation (TWMLE)
19Agenda
20Joint fat-tailed behaviour
21Copulas: a well-trodden (mathematical) path
22Factor identification
23Fundamental data limitations: the ‘fine structure’ problem
24Agenda
25Portfolio construction
26Portfolio construction: sensitivities
27Regime switching
28Impact on asset allocation problem
29Avoiding undue complexity?
30Summary
31Important Information



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