Chris,
We seem to be at crossed purposes here.
Characterizing portfolios is traditionally the work of securities databases and painstaking fundamental analysis. We know models aren't reality, and that outcomes certainly differ (especially in the short term) from the results predicted by models. But much of investing is about creating structure based on a logical and empirical "fit" with historical experience.
I am describing a three factor model that narrows the variables that describe investment returns in any stock portfolio—the variables that investors should focus on managing. These are the “risk factors” I was referring to and they do not necessarily relate just to standard deviation which is one of your core criticisms.
The factors are “market” Stocks minus t-bills, small cap minus large and value minus growth
The three-factor model reads a time series of returns, measuring the sensitivity to each factor and assigning a percent to the common movement.
Investors can tilt their portfolios for a higher expected return than the market by increasing their exposure to the small or value risk factors or both.
But they don’t need to hold a concentrated portfolio to achieve this. By overweighting either or both the size and value premiums investors have a higher expected return than the market portfolio but it is still possible to achieve this and hold thousands of securities.
Equally , if you present a concentrated portfolio of “winning stocks” it is possible to compare this portfolio with the risk factors and determine how much of the variation in returns can be explained by exposure to these common risk factors.
Hence my point is that if you did better than the market portfolio you probably took more risk by which I mean you probably had more exposure to small stocks, value stocks or both. These are compensated risk factors – compensation for higher risk which you cannot get rid of through diversification.
But if you only held 25 stocks you also had uncompensated risk, risk you were not rewarded for taking because you could have diversified it away simply by holding more securities.
We seem to be at crossed purposes here.
Characterizing portfolios is traditionally the work of securities databases and painstaking fundamental analysis. We know models aren't reality, and that outcomes certainly differ (especially in the short term) from the results predicted by models. But much of investing is about creating structure based on a logical and empirical "fit" with historical experience.
I am describing a three factor model that narrows the variables that describe investment returns in any stock portfolio—the variables that investors should focus on managing. These are the “risk factors” I was referring to and they do not necessarily relate just to standard deviation which is one of your core criticisms.
The factors are “market” Stocks minus t-bills, small cap minus large and value minus growth
The three-factor model reads a time series of returns, measuring the sensitivity to each factor and assigning a percent to the common movement.
Investors can tilt their portfolios for a higher expected return than the market by increasing their exposure to the small or value risk factors or both.
But they don’t need to hold a concentrated portfolio to achieve this. By overweighting either or both the size and value premiums investors have a higher expected return than the market portfolio but it is still possible to achieve this and hold thousands of securities.
Equally , if you present a concentrated portfolio of “winning stocks” it is possible to compare this portfolio with the risk factors and determine how much of the variation in returns can be explained by exposure to these common risk factors.
Hence my point is that if you did better than the market portfolio you probably took more risk by which I mean you probably had more exposure to small stocks, value stocks or both. These are compensated risk factors – compensation for higher risk which you cannot get rid of through diversification.
But if you only held 25 stocks you also had uncompensated risk, risk you were not rewarded for taking because you could have diversified it away simply by holding more securities.