Correlation Coefficient and Variance

archived_user

New member
Joined
Jun 18, 2026
Messages
0
Reaction score
0
Which one of the following statements about correlation is NOT correct?
A)
Potential benefits from diversification arise when correlation is less than +1.
B)
If the correlation coefficient were -1, a zero variance portfolio could be constructed.
C)
If the correlation coefficient were 0, a zero variance portfolio could be constructed.
I had to think this one through, is this logic correct? Since the formula for Variance is
and we want 0 variance, that would mean we need the third term 2w1*w2*Corr1,2*stdev1*stdev2 to equal negative some number. That way we can add the other two positive terms to maybe come up with zero variance?
 
wichertj wrote: I had to think this one through, is this logic correct? Since the formula for Variance is
and we want 0 variance, that would mean we need the third term 2w1*w2*Corr1,2*stdev1*stdev2 to equal negative some number. That way we can add the other two positive terms to maybe come up with zero variance?
It is.
 
The situation becomes even simpler for c, since the third term becomes 0. The individual asset variances are >=0 and w1+w2=1 with w1,w2>=0. About the only way I can think of to get portfolio variance = 0 is to put 100% weight on an asset with variance = 0.
 
I’m too tired to crank the math, but if I remember correctly, with a perfect negative correlation, you get a zero-variance portfolio if w1/w2 = sd2/sd1 (ie if you choose weights such that the ratio of the weights is the inverse of the ratios of the standard deviations). In other words if you had standard deviations of 10% for asset 1 and 5% for asset two, weights of 1/3 for asset 1 and 2/3 for asset 2 would give a zero-variance portfolio.
 
Back
Top