Shortfall Risk

FrankCFA

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I saw the pass exam use E(R) - 2 * standard deviations to meausre the shortfall risk. But i don’t find it in CFA curriculum. Is it usually the case? Or different risk tolerence has different scale number, i.e. maybe E(R) - 5 * standard deviations.
 
Good question; I recognized the formula E(R) - 2sigma, too, but also did not see it in the CFA curriculum.
 
Not to derail the question but isn’t shortfall risk Roy’s saftey first criterion?
Er - MAR / standard deviation?
 
Galli wrote:
Not to derail the question but isn’t shortfall risk Roy’s saftey first criterion?
Er - MAR / standard deviation?
- Yes “The oldest shortfall risk criterion is Roy’s safety first criterion” - pg. 54, RR 18. Asset Allocation
 
FrankCFA wrote:
I saw the pass exam use E(R) - 2 * standard deviations to meausre the shortfall risk. But i don’t find it in CFA curriculum. Is it usually the case? Or different risk tolerence has different scale number, i.e. maybe E(R) - 5 * standard deviations.
On pg. 54 of reading 18 - Asset Allocation, you find a write up under example 4 that identifies the method of using E(r) - 2 st. devs to calculate a particular shortfall risk. In particular, they specify -2 stdev’s as representing a 2.5% probability of falling below the expected return. The key here is the normality assumption. Hope this helps.
 
Guys - if you are talking about the 2013 exam question… states so in the write up leading to the question
Quote:
They indicate that the portfolio should have only a small
probability of declining more than 10% in nominal pre-tax terms in any one year. Lenard
explains to the Voorts that a normal distribution can be used to model the portfolio returns. The
Voorts agree to use a two-standard-deviation approach to monitor the shortfall risk of the
portfolio.
 
^CPK, does that mean this approach is no longer in the latest curriculum?
 
What I meant to say was - if they want you to use Shortfall Risk approach - they will define the level of standard deviations (2 as in the above).
You need to know the definition of Shortfall risk.
but what kind - and what level - should be provided. If it is not provided - include the proviso - assuming a 2 standard deviation approach to Shortfall risk —- shortfall risk is …. and you should get the points
 
On pg. 54 of reading 18 - Asset Allocation, you find a write up under example 4 that identifies the method of using E(r) - 2 st. devs to calculate a particular shortfall risk. In particular, they specify -2 stdev’s as representing a 2.5% probability of falling below the expected return. The key here is the normality assumption. Hope this helps.
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Thanks. But Reading 18 starts from p.175 (Curriculum)? Can’t find it….
 
2014 curriculum - Shortfall risk is on Pg 194 under example 4 ….
 
FrankCFA wrote:
On pg. 54 of reading 18 - Asset Allocation, you find a write up under example 4 that identifies the method of using E(r) - 2 st. devs to calculate a particular shortfall risk. In particular, they specify -2 stdev’s as representing a 2.5% probability of falling below the expected return. The key here is the normality assumption. Hope this helps.
Thanks. But Reading 18 starts from p.175 (Curriculum)? Can’t find it….
[/quote]
My appologies - I was using the EBook.
 
Got it. Thanks.
Quote from CFA Curriculum:
Given a normal distribution of returns, the probability of a return that is more than two standard deviations below the expected return is approximately 2.5 percent. Therefore, if we subtract two standard deviations from a portfolio’s expected return and the resulting number is above the client’s return threshold, the resulting portfolio passes that shortfall risk test.
 
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