Facts About Factors: Paula Cocoma Megan Czasonis Mark Kritzman David Turkington
Facts About Factors: Paula Cocoma Megan Czasonis Mark Kritzman David Turkington
Facts About Factors: Paula Cocoma Megan Czasonis Mark Kritzman David Turkington
about
Factors
Paula Cocoma
Megan Czasonis
Mark Kritzman
David Turkington
Why use factors?
Factors may be less correlated than assets and therefore provide better
diversification.
Factors may be more effective than assets at reducing noise.
Assets define the opportunity set. It is impossible to create a more efficient in-sample portfolio with the
same constraints and of the same periodicity by regrouping assets into factors.
Principal components (all factors uncorrelated) Asset classes (correlations range from -0.16 to 0.82)
7% 7%
6% 6%
5% 5%
4% 4%
Excess return
Excess return
3% 3%
2% 2%
1% 1%
0% 0%
0% 5% 10% 15% 20% 25% 0% 5% 10% 15% 20% 25%
Volatility Volatility
Frontier with leverage Frontier without leverage Frontier with leverage Frontier without leverage
Notes: This analysis incorporates the following asset classes: U.S. large cap, U.S. small cap, EAFE equities, emerging equities,
global sovereigns, U.S. government bonds, U.S. corporate bonds, commodities, and hedge funds. It is based on monthly returns over
the period Jan 1990 through Dec 2013. Excess returns represent the return over the risk-free rate. All data obtained from
DataStream.
Noise Reduction
Noise reduction: Means
Does consolidating toward factors reduce noise more effectively than consolidating
toward assets?
Portfolio returns are less noisy than the returns of the assets within them due to
diversification.
However, we have already shown that efficient frontiers comprised of factors are
identical to efficient frontiers comprised of assets.
It follows, therefore, that we cannot reduce dispersion around portfolio means more
effectively by using factor groupings as opposed to asset groupings .
Noise reduction: Covariances
If asset returns are normally distributed and serially independent, the average noise in
covariances across a group of assets is no less than the average noise in covariances
across the individual assets that form that group.
Nonetheless, there is no reason to expect factor groupings to produce less noise than
asset class groupings.
Predictability
Superior predictability an untestable hypothesis
However, some investors may be more skilled at predicting assets than factors.
It is impossible to test these hypotheses generically; they are investor specific.
Superior predictability an untestable hypothesis
However, some investors may be more skilled at predicting assets than factors.
It is impossible to test these hypotheses generically; they are investor specific.
Nonetheless, those who prefer to predict factors are faced with the additional
challenge of predicting how these factors map onto factor mimicking portfolios.
Estimation Error
Sources of estimation error
Small-Sample Independent-Sample Mapping Interval
Error Error Error Error
Vary: Small samples Vary: Forecasting sample Vary: Factor mapping Vary: Measurement interval
Hold constant: Hold constant: Hold constant: Hold constant:
Forecasting sample Sample size Sample size Sample size
Factor mapping Factor mapping Forecasting sample Forecasting sample
Measurement interval Measurement interval Measurement interval Factor mapping
Small-sample error
The realization of parameters from a small sample will likely differ from the
parameter values of a large sample from which it is selected.
2
1 ,, ,, ,, , , ,
, =
, ,
=1
When A and B are the same asset, this formula will measure the error in the
standard deviation of that asset.
Small-sample error
The realization of parameters from a small sample will likely differ from the
parameter values of a large sample from which it is selected.
2
1 ,, ,, ,, , , ,
, =
, ,
=1
When A and B are the same asset, this formula will measure the error in the
standard deviation of that asset.
Independent-sample error
The realization of parameters from a future sample will likely differ from the
parameter values of an independent historical sample.
2
1 ,, ,, ,, ,,
,,
,,
, = (, )2
, ,
=1
Notes: In rare instances, small sampler error exceeds the mean squared error between two independent samples. In these cases, we
record small sample error as the mean squared error between the two samples, and record independent sample error as zero.
Independent-sample error
The realization of parameters from a future sample will likely differ from the
parameter values of an independent historical sample.
2
1 ,, ,, ,, ,,
,,
,,
, = (, )2
, ,
=1
Notes: In rare instances, small sampler error exceeds the mean squared error between two independent samples. In these cases, we
record small sample error as the mean squared error between the two samples, and record independent sample error as zero.
Mapping error
Assets define the opportunity set for investing. A desired factor exposure must be
mapped onto a portfolio of assets to be investable.
The mapping that best tracks a factor in the future will likely differ from the mapping
of an independent historical sample.
The calculations for small sample error and independent sample error for factors do
not reflect mapping error.
Mapping error
Mapping error can be isolated by comparing the covariance of the best-fit factor-
mimicking portfolio to the covariance of a factor-mimicking portfolio estimated from
an independent sample, holding the evaluation period constant.
2
1 ,,
,,
,,
,, ,, ,,
, =
, ,
=1
Mapping error
Mapping error can be isolated by comparing the covariance of the best-fit factor-
mimicking portfolio to the covariance of a factor-mimicking portfolio estimated from
an independent sample, holding the evaluation period constant.
2
1 ,,
,,
,,
,, ,, ,,
, =
, ,
=1
^ ^
A, B indicate factor mappings A, B indicate factor mappings
derived from the independent derived from the testing subsample
subsample
Interval error
10%
Emerging markets equity
0%
-10%
-20%
-30%
-40%
-20% -15% -10% -5% 0% 5% 10% 15%
U.S. equity
Interval error
80%
60%
Emerging markets equity
40%
20%
0%
-20%
-40%
-60%
-80%
-60% -40% -20% 0% 20% 40% 60%
U.S. equity
Interval error
200%
Emerging markets equity
150%
100%
50%
0%
-50%
-100%
-50% 0% 50% 100% 150%
U.S. equity
Interval error: Long-horizon and short-horizon volatility
The volatility of the cumulative continuous returns of x over q periods is given by:
( xt xt q 1 ) x q 2k 1 (q k ) x , x
q 1
t t k
Interval error: Long-horizon and short-horizon volatility
The volatility of the cumulative continuous returns of x over q periods is given by:
( xt xt q 1 ) x q 2k 1 (q k ) x , x
q 1
t t k
The volatility of the cumulative continuous returns of x over q periods is given by:
( xt xt q 1 ) x q 2k 1 (q k ) x , x
q 1
t t k
The correlation between the cumulative returns of x and the cumulative returns of y over q
periods is given by:
( xt xt q 1 , yt yt q 1 )
q xt , yt k 1 ( q k )( xt k , yt xt , yt k )
q 1
q 2k 1 ( q k ) xt , xt k q 2k 1 ( q k ) yt , yt k
q 1 q 1
Interval error: Long-horizon and short-horizon correlation
The correlation between the cumulative returns of x and the cumulative returns of y over q
periods is given by:
( xt xt q 1 , yt yt q 1 )
q xt , yt k 1 ( q k )( xt k , yt xt , yt k )
q 1
q 2k 1 ( q k ) xt , xt k q 2k 1 ( q k ) yt , yt k
q 1 q 1
The correlation between the cumulative returns of x and the cumulative returns of y over q
periods is given by:
( xt xt q 1 , yt yt q 1 )
q xt , yt k 1 ( q k )( xt k , yt xt , yt k )
q 1
q 2k 1 ( q k ) xt , xt k q 2k 1 ( q k ) yt , yt k
q 1 q 1
This term captures the auto- This term captures the auto-
correlation of x correlation of y
Interval error
Interval error can be isolated by comparing a covariance matrix estimated from low-
frequency returns to a covariance matrix estimated from high-frequency returns.
2
1 ,, ,, ,, /12 ,, ,, ,,
, =
, ,
=1
Interval error
Interval error can be isolated by comparing a covariance matrix estimated from low-
frequency returns to a covariance matrix estimated from high-frequency returns.
2
1 ,, ,, ,, /12 ,, ,, ,,
, =
, ,
=1
1
= 2
(, )2
=1 =1
Composite instability score
The four sources of estimation error are independent from one another, which
means we can sum the variances of each error and then take the square root of this
sum to compute a composite instability score.
() = 2 + 2 + 2 + 2
Classifications and Data
Asset classes, fundamental factors and principal components
Asset Classes
U.S. Large Cap S&P 500
Equity
U.S. Small Cap Russell 2000
U.S. Government Bonds Barclays U.S. Aggregate Government
Fixed Income
U.S. Corporate Bonds Barclays U.S. Aggregate Corporate
Commodities S&P GSCI Commodities
Alternatives
Hedge Funds HFRI Fund of Funds Composite
Fundmanetal Factors
Inflation U.S. Consumer Price Index, Seasonally Adjusted
Macro
Growth One year ahead U.S. GDP growth forecast
Term Premium 10-year minus 2-year U.S. treasury yield
Fixed Income
Credit Premium Baa U.S. corporate yield minus 10-year U.S. treasury yield
Small Cap Premium Fama-French Small-minus-Big factor
Equity
Value Premium Fama-French High-minus-Low factor
Notes: Our analysis uses monthly data over the period Jan 1990 through Jul 2014. We proxy U.S. large cap, U.S. small cap, U.S. government bonds, U.S.
corporate bonds, commodities, and hedge funds with the following indices: S&P 500, Russell 2000, Barclays U.S. Agg Government, Barclays U.S. Agg.
Corporate, S&P GSCI Commodity, and HFRI Fund of Funds Composite, respectively. We proxy inflation, growth, term premium, credit premium, small premium,
and value premium with the following: U.S. CPI, U.S. GDP growth forecast, 10-2 yr U.S. Treasury, Baa Corp-10 yr U.S. Treasury, Fama-French SMB factor, and
Fama-French HML factor, respectively.
To analyze fundamental factors, we build six factor-mimicking portfolios by regressing each factor on the six asset classes.
To analyze principal components, we build six portfolios using principal components analysis (each portfolio corresponds to an eigenvector).
Principal components
Principal components
Principal components
Principal components
Industries, attributes and principal components
10 portfolios formed
Industries
on GICS level I
10 portfolios formed
Size
on capitalization
10 portfolios formed
Value
on book-to-market
10 portfolios formed
Momentum
on trailing 1y return
Top 10 principal
Principal Components
components
Notes: Our analysis uses monthly returns over the period Jan 1989 through Jan 2015. We narrow the universe of 400 stocks (based on the constituents in the
MSCI U.S. Index as of Jan 2015) to the 194 stocks that have full price, market cap, and book-to-market history over this sample.
To form industry portfolios, we use GICS classifications.
To form attribute portfolios, we use average market cap, book-to-market ratios, and 1-year returns, respectively.
To form principal components portfolios, we run a PCA on the 194 stocks and form portfolios corresponding to the top 10 eigenvectors.
* Because we run the PCA on 194 stocks using 36-month sub-samples, we restrict our universe to only the top 36 principal components.
Results
Asset classes, fundamental factors, and principal components
0.62
0.43 0.44
0.41 0.39
0.31 0.31
0.28 0.27
0.25
0.23
0.00
0.86
0.68
0.58
0.60
0.41
0.38 0.39
0.37
0.34
0.30
0.27 0.27
0.26
0.19
0.00
0.80
0.67
0.57
It has become fashionable to use factors instead of assets as the building blocks for
forming portfolios.
Some have argued that factors offer greater potential for diversification, but this
argument is specious.
Others argue that factor groupings reduce noise more effectively than asset groupings,
but this too is untrue.
It is also argued that it is easier to predict factors than assets, but this argument is
generically untestable.
Nonetheless, it may be the case that factor parameters are more stationary than asset
parameters.
We find no evidence that factors produce more stable results taking into account small-
sample error, independent-sample error, mapping error, and interval error. Instead, we
find the opposite to be true.
Conclusion