Artigo Revisado por pares

Dynamic Strategies for Asset Allocation

1988; Taylor & Francis; Volume: 44; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês

10.2469/faj.v44.n1.16

ISSN

1938-3312

Autores

André F. Perold, William F. Sharpe,

Tópico(s)

Housing Market and Economics

Resumo

As risky assets (e.g., stocks) fluctuate in value, the value of a portfolio containing them may change, as may their allocation relative to the safe assets (e.g., bills) within the portfolio. One must decide how to rebalance the portfolio in response to such changes. Dynamic strategies are explicit rules for doing so. Different strategies will produce different risk and return characteristics. Buy-and-hold strategies are nothing strategies. They have a minimum return proportional to the amount allocated to bills and an upside proportional to the amount allocated to stocks. Their performance is linearly related to the performance of the equity market. Strategies that sell stocks as the market falls and buys stocks as the market rises represent the purchase of portfolio insurance. Particular examples are constant-proportion portfolio insurance and option-based portfolio insurance. These strategies have better downside protection and better upside potential than buy-and-hold strategies. They do worse in...

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