wouldratherberiding
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- Mar 16, 2016
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In both of these, does the floor value remain the same?
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That’s not what he asked.ajb1 wrote:
Both Buy and Hold and CPPI have floor values.
Mr. Smart, please don’t respond if you don’t know the answer. We’re all here trying to learn
The floor is not really fixed for CPPI, if we assume rebalancing (which is safe to assume).S2000magician wrote:
The floor is fixed for each.
For whatever it’s worth, constant mix also has a fixed floor value; it happens to be zero, unfortunately.
I’m probably not as smart as you, but I think the floor is fixed with CPPI, it is the cushion that can change.MrSmart wrote:
The floor is not really fixed for CPPI, if we assume rebalancing (which is safe to assume).S2000magician wrote:
The floor is fixed for each.
For whatever it’s worth, constant mix also has a fixed floor value; it happens to be zero, unfortunately.
I’m not sure if this is in the material.
Just glided through the material to check, I believe they throw a hint that it does change, but it’s not important for the exam.Gersonides wrote:
I’m probably not as smart as you, but I think the floor is fixed with CPPI, it is the cushion that can change.MrSmart wrote:
The floor is not really fixed for CPPI, if we assume rebalancing (which is safe to assume).S2000magician wrote:
The floor is fixed for each.
For whatever it’s worth, constant mix also has a fixed floor value; it happens to be zero, unfortunately.
I’m not sure if this is in the material.
Depends on your collateral for leverage, and how fast the market crumbles.Prosper0 wrote:
Yeah I had the same question when I encountered a related problem in CFAI 2012 Past test, specifically, Q3 Part 3.
In the answer, they say that both Buy&Hold and CPPI have floor value. I am really not so sure, given the dynamic nature of CPPI.
Hypothetically, under CPPI, let’s say stocks were trending up you keep increasing your allocation to equities, inline with CPPI. What if the stocks than crashed - for the sake of argument to almost zero. Wouldn’t your overall portfolio value fall below the initial floor value?
Fixed a few things for you.Mmarin3005 wrote:
The floor values are fixed for a certain period of time for Buy and Hold and CPPI. For CPPI the rebalancing is going to be done by subtracting the floor value from the total portfolio value giving you your “cushion” and multiplying the cushion by the multiplier which is some constant of the cushion greater than 1 to find your total desired equity allocation.