Are Hedged Portfolios More Optimal Than Modern Portfolio Theory or Efficient Frontier Designed Ones?
Broken Pie Chart
English - January 27, 2019 19:20 - 22 minutes - 20.7 MB - ★★★★★ - 16 ratingsInvesting Business Homepage Download Apple Podcasts Google Podcasts Overcast Castro Pocket Casts RSS feed
Previous Episode: Podcast: Probabilities of Future Federal Reserve Interest Rate Moves?
Next Episode: How Can Investors Hedge Downside Risks on Single Stocks?
In this episode Derek Moore discusses what Modern Portfolio Theory (MPT) and Efficient Frontier Investing means and how traditional investment risk rely heavily on standard deviation and variance to determine where a portfolio fits into a risk metric. Plus, Derek comments on how positive upside returns can actually increase traditionally used investment ratios like Sharpe.
Key Takeaways:
• What is Modern Portfolio Theory • What is an Efficient Frontier Portfolio? • How is investment portfolio standard deviation calculated? • Easy ways to understand standard deviation using simple three-day temperature example • Explain what a risk adjusted return means in relationship to portfolio returns and volatility • Problems with traditional portfolio design especially given low bond yields • Why being long markets while being hedged may be more optimal for investors near retirement? • How Sharpe Ratio may get worse after strong upside market move. • Alternatives such as post-modern portfolio theory only considering downside deviation.
Mentioned in this Episode:
Broken Pie Chart Book by Derek Moore https://amzn.to/2COXRAS
Target Date Funds https://razorwealth.com/podcast-target-date-investment-funds-good-bad-or-just-misunderstood/
Modern Portfolio Theory (MPT) + Efficient Frontier https://www.investopedia.com/terms/e/efficientfrontier.asp