magicskyfairy
New member
- Jan 18, 2010
- 0
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hi all,
exhibit 9 of reading 31 shows that the multiplier (m) value for a CPPI portfolio is m > 1.
Also, formula 3 is the following:
Target investment in stocks = m x (Portfolio Value - Floor value)
floor value is the cash portion of the portfolio. So lets assume the floor value is $40,000, and m = 1.5, and the starting portfolio value is $100,000 (ie I have 60,000 in stocks).
according to this formula, we’d have the following:
Target investment in stocks = 1.5 x ( 100,000 - 40,000) = 1.5 x (60,000) = 90,000
Can someone explain to me what this even means? what the hell is $90,000 then? why would that be my target investment in stocks - if I did that, then I’d be down to $10,000 in cash, in which case the formula would then be 1.5 x(100,000-10,000), and I’d then have a target of $135,000… what am I missing about this formula? am I using it in a super wrong way?
exhibit 9 of reading 31 shows that the multiplier (m) value for a CPPI portfolio is m > 1.
Also, formula 3 is the following:
Target investment in stocks = m x (Portfolio Value - Floor value)
floor value is the cash portion of the portfolio. So lets assume the floor value is $40,000, and m = 1.5, and the starting portfolio value is $100,000 (ie I have 60,000 in stocks).
according to this formula, we’d have the following:
Target investment in stocks = 1.5 x ( 100,000 - 40,000) = 1.5 x (60,000) = 90,000
Can someone explain to me what this even means? what the hell is $90,000 then? why would that be my target investment in stocks - if I did that, then I’d be down to $10,000 in cash, in which case the formula would then be 1.5 x(100,000-10,000), and I’d then have a target of $135,000… what am I missing about this formula? am I using it in a super wrong way?