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Abstract

Choosing a portfolio from among the enormous range of assets now available to an investor would be facilitated if we could locate the return-risk ratio of a particular allocation along a spectrum of possibilities. A comparison between portfolio choices can tell us, for example, whether it is better to select a suboptimal portfolio from a large class of assets or to perform a Markowitz optimal procedure on a subset of the assets. A common criterion for this assessment is the expected return-to-risk trade-off as measured by the Sharpe ratio. Given that the ideal, maximized Sharpe ratio must be estimated, we develop, in this paper, an approach that enables us to assess ex ante how close a given portfolio is to this ideal. For this purpose, we derive the large-sample distribution of the maximized Sharpe ratio, as obtained from sample estimates, under very general assumptions. This distribution then represents the spectrum of possible optimal return-risk trade-offs that can be constructed from the data. We illustrate applications of the theory by analyzing a large sample of US companies, comparing constant-correlation and momentum strategies with the optimal strategy. Simulations based on this data are also given for illustration. [PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]

Details

Title
Optimal portfolio choice using the maximum Sharpe ratio
Author
Maller, Ross A; Durand, Robert B; Jafarpour, Hediah
Pages
49-73
Publication year
2010
Publication date
Summer 2010
Publisher
Incisive Media Limited
ISSN
14651211
e-ISSN
17552842
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
817784573
Copyright
Copyright Incisive Media Plc Summer 2010