In the question they provide enough information to calculate VAR based on the analytical method and also provide a table of returns from 700 iterations of the simulated returns using monte carlo.
My question is, how many simulations does it take for a monte carlo simulation to equal the actual distributions of return that were actually realized? For example, the question says they used actual returns which produced a mean return of 14.8% and a standard deviation of 20.5. Would a monte carlo simulation ever reproduce (with enough simulation runs) this actual distrubution of returns realized considering the simulation itself is ran off this distribution? Or does the monte carlo ‘fill in the gaps’ of returns never realized but possible based on the distribution of returns?
I guess I’m not quite sure how a monte carlo simulation produces anything different than just measured values?
My question is, how many simulations does it take for a monte carlo simulation to equal the actual distributions of return that were actually realized? For example, the question says they used actual returns which produced a mean return of 14.8% and a standard deviation of 20.5. Would a monte carlo simulation ever reproduce (with enough simulation runs) this actual distrubution of returns realized considering the simulation itself is ran off this distribution? Or does the monte carlo ‘fill in the gaps’ of returns never realized but possible based on the distribution of returns?
I guess I’m not quite sure how a monte carlo simulation produces anything different than just measured values?