VaR {PerformanceAnalytics} | R Documentation |
calculate various Value at Risk (VaR) measures
Description
Calculates Value-at-Risk(VaR) for univariate, component, and marginal cases using a variety of analytical methods.Usage
VaR(R, p = 0.95, method = c("modified", "gaussian","historical", "kernel"), clean = c("none", "boudt", "geltner"), portfolio_method = c("single", "component","marginal"), weights = NULL, mu = NULL, sigma = NULL, m3 = NULL, m4 = NULL, invert = TRUE, ...)
Arguments
R |
an xts, vector, matrix, data frame, timeSeries or zoo object of asset returns |
p |
confidence level for calculation, default p=.99 |
method |
one of "modified","gaussian","historical", "kernel", see Details. |
clean |
method for data cleaning through Return.clean . Current options are "none", "boudt", or "geltner". |
portfolio_method |
one of "single","component","marginal" defining whether to do univariate, component, or marginal calc, see Details. |
weights |
portfolio weighting vector, default NULL, see Details |
mu |
If univariate, mu is the mean of the series. Otherwise mu is the vector of means of the return series , default NULL, , see Details |
sigma |
If univariate, sigma is the variance of the series. Otherwise sigma is the covariance matrix of the return series , default NULL, see Details |
m3 |
If univariate, m3 is the skewness of the series. Otherwise m3 is the coskewness matrix of the returns series, default NULL, see Details |
m4 |
If univariate, m4 is the excess kurtosis of the series. Otherwise m4 is the cokurtosis matrix of the return series, default NULL, see Details |
invert |
TRUE/FALSE whether to invert the VaR measure. see Details. |
... |
any other passthru parameters |
Value
VaR measureBackground
This function provides several estimation methods for the Value at Risk (typically written as VaR) of a return series and the Component VaR of a portfolio. Take care to capitalize VaR in the commonly accepted manner, to avoid confusion with var (variance) and VAR (vector auto-regression). VaR is an industry standard for measuring downside risk. For a return series, VaR is defined as the high quantile (e.g. ~a 95% or 99% quantile) of the negative value of the returns. This quantile needs to be estimated. With a sufficiently large data set, you may choose to utilize the empirical quantile calculated usingquantile
.
More efficient estimates of VaR are obtained if a (correct) assumption
is made on the return distribution, such as the normal distribution.
If your return series is skewed and/or has excess kurtosis,
Cornish-Fisher estimates of VaR can be more appropriate.
For the VaR of a portfolio, it is also of interest to decompose total
portfolio VaR into the risk contributions of each of the portfolio
components.
For the above mentioned VaR estimators, such a decomposition is possible
in a financially meaningful way.
Univariate VaR estimation methods
The VaR at a probability level p (e.g. 95%) is the p-quantile of the negative returns, or equivalently, is the negative value of the c=1-p quantile of the returns. In a set of returns for which sufficently long history exists, the per-period Value at Risk is simply the quantile of the period negative returns :
VaR=quantile(-R,p)
where q_{.99} is the 99% empirical quantile of the negative return series.
This method is also sometimes called “historical VaR”, as it is by definition ex post analysis of the return distribution, and may be accessed with
method="historical"
.
When you don't have a sufficiently long set of returns to use non-parametric or historical VaR, or wish to more closely model an ideal distribution, it is common to us a parmetric estimate based on the distribution. J.P. Morgan's RiskMetrics parametric mean-VaR was published in 1994 and this methodology for estimating parametric mean-VaR has become what most literature generally refers to as “VaR” and what we have implemented as
VaR
.
See Return to RiskMetrics: Evolution of a Standardhttp://www.riskmetrics.com/publications/techdocs/r2rovv.html.
Parametric mean-VaR does a better job of accounting for the tails of the distribution by more precisely estimating shape of the distribution tails of the risk quantile. The most common estimate is a normal (or Gaussian) distribution R\sim N(\mu,\sigma) for the return series. In this case, estimation of VaR requires the mean return \bar{R}, the return distribution and the variance of the returns \sigma. In the most common case, parametric VaR is thus calculated by
sigma=var(R)
VaR= -mean(R) - sqrt(sigma)*qnorm(c)
where z_{c} is the c-quantile of the standard normal distribution. Represented in R by qnorm(c)
,
and may be accessed with method="gaussian"
.
Other forms of parametric mean-VaR estimation utilize a different distribution for the distribution of losses to better account for the possible fat-tailed nature of downside risk. The package
VaR
contains methods for simulating and estimating lognormal VaR.norm
and generalized Pareto VaR.gpd
distributions to overcome some of the problems with nonparametric
or parametric mean-VaR calculations on a limited sample size or on potentially fat-tailed distributions.
There is also a VaR.backtest
function to apply simulation methods to create a more robust
estimate of the potential distribution of losses. Less commonly a covariance matrix of multiple risk factors may be applied.
The limitations of mean Value-at-Risk are well covered in the literature. The limitations of traditional mean-VaR are all related to the use of a symetrical distribution function. Use of simulations, resampling, or Pareto distributions all help in making a more accurate prediction, but they are still flawed for assets with significantly non-normal (skewed or kurtotic) distributions. Zangari (1996) and Favre and Galeano(2002) provide a modified VaR calculation that takes the higher moments of non-normal distributions (skewness, kurtosis) into account through the use of a Cornish Fisher expansion, and collapses to standard (traditional) mean-VaR if the return stream follows a standard distribution. This measure is now widely cited and used in the literature, and is usually referred to as “Modified VaR” or “Modified Cornish-Fisher VaR”. They arrive at their modified VaR calculation in the following manner:
z_cf=z_c+[(z_c^2-1)S]/6+[(z_c^3-3z_c)K]/24-[(2z_c^3-5z_c)S^2]/36
VaR= -mean(R) - sqrt(sigma)*z_cf
where S is the skewness of R and K is the excess kurtosis of R.
Cornish-Fisher VaR collapses to traditional mean-VaR when returns are normally distributed. As such, the
VaR
and VaR
functions are wrappers for the VaR
function. The Cornish-Fisher expansion also naturally encompasses much
of the variability in returns that could be uncovered by more
computationally intensive techniques such as resampling or Monte-Carlo
simulation. This is the default method for the VaR
function, and may be accessed by setting method="modified"
.
Favre and Galeano also utilize modified VaR in a modified Sharpe Ratio as the return/risk measure for their portfolio optimization analysis, see
SharpeRatio.modified
for more information.
Component VaR
By settingportfolio_method="component"
you may calculate
the risk contribution of each element of the portfolio. The return from
the function in this case will be a list with three components: the
univariate portfolio VaR, the scalar contribution of each component to
the portfolio VaR (these will sum to the portfolio VaR), and a
percentage risk contribution (which will sum to 100%).
Both the numerical and percentage component contributions to VaR may contain both positive and negative contributions. A negative contribution to Component VaR indicates a portfolio risk diversifier. Increasing the position weight will reduce overall portoflio VaR.
If a weighting vector is not passed in via
weights
, the function will assume an equal weighted (neutral) portfolio.
Multiple risk decomposition approaches have been suggested in the literature. A naïve approach is to set the risk contribution equal to the stand-alone risk. This approach is overly simplistic and neglects important diversification effects of the units being exposed differently to the underlying risk factors. An alternative approach is to measure the VaR contribution as the weight of the position in the portfolio times the partial derivative of the portfolio VaR with respect to the component weight.
C[i]VaR = w[i]*(dVaR/dw[i]).
Because the portfolio VaR is linear in position size, we have that by
Euler's theorem the portfolio VaR is the sum of these risk
contributions.
Gouriéroux (2000) shows that for
VaR, this mathematical decomposition of portfolio risk has a
financial meaning. It equals the negative value of the asset's
expected contribution to the portfolio return when the portfolio
return equals the negative portfolio VaR:
C[i]VaR = -E( w[i]r[i]|rp=-VaR )
For the decomposition of Gaussian VaR, the estimated mean and covariance
matrix are needed. For the decomposition of modified VaR,
also estimates of the coskewness and cokurtosis matrices are needed. If r denotes the Nx1 return vector and mu is
the mean vector, then the N \times N^2 co-skewness matrix is
m3 = E[ (r - mu)(r - mu)' %x% (r - \mu)']
The N \times N^3 co-kurtosis matrix is
E[ (r - \mu)(r - \mu)' %x% (r - \mu)'%x% (r - \mu)']
where %x% stands for the Kronecker product. The matrices can be estimated through the functions
skewness.MM
and kurtosis.MM
.
More efficient estimators have been proposed by Martellini and Ziemann (2007) and will be implemented in the future.
As discussed among others in Cont, Deguest and Scandolo (2007), it is important that the estimation of the VaR measure is robust to single outliers. This is especially the case for modified VaR and its decomposition, since they use higher order moments. By default, the portfolio moments are estimated by their sample counterparts. If
clean="boudt"
then the 1-p most
extreme observations are winsorized if they are detected as being
outliers. For more information, see Boudt, Peterson and Croux (2008) and
Return.clean
. If your data consist of returns for highly illiquid assets, then clean="geltner"
may be more appropriate to reduce distortion caused by autocorrelation, see Return.Geltner
for details.
Epperlein and Smillie (2006) introduced a non-parametric kernel estimator for component risk contributions, which is available via
method="kernel"
and portfolio_method="component"
.
Marginal VaR
Different papers call this different things. In the Denton and Jayaraman paper referenced here, this calculation is called Incremental VaR. We have chosen the more common usage of calling this difference in VaR's in portfolios without the instrument and with the instrument as the “difference at the Margin”, thus the name Marginal VaR. This is incredibly confusing, and hasn't been resolved in the literature at this time. Simon Keel and David Ardia (2009) attempt to reconcile some of the definitional issues and address some of the shortcomings of this measure in their working paper titled “Generalized Marginal Risk”. Hopefully their improved Marginal Risk measures may be included here in the future.Note
The option toinvert
the VaR measure should appease both
academics and practitioners. The mathematical definition of VaR as the
negative value of a quantile will (usually) produce a positive number.
Practitioners will argue that VaR denotes a loss, and should be
internally consistent with the quantile (a negative number). For tables
and charts, different preferences may apply for clarity and
compactness. As such, we provide the option, and set the default to
TRUE to keep the return consistent with prior versions of
PerformanceAnalytics, but make no value judgement on which approach is
preferable.
The prototype of the univariate Cornish Fisher VaR function was completed by Prof. Diethelm Wuertz. All corrections to the calculation and error handling are the fault of Brian Peterson.
Author(s)
Brian G. Peterson and Kris BoudtReferences
Boudt, Kris, Peterson, Brian, and Christophe Croux. 2008. Estimation and decomposition of downside risk for portfolios with non-normal returns. 2008. The Journal of Risk, vol. 11, 79-103.Cont, Rama, Deguest, Romain and Giacomo Scandolo. Robustness and sensitivity analysis of risk measurement procedures. Financial Engineering Report No. 2007-06, Columbia University Center for Financial Engineering.
Denton M. and Jayaraman, J.D. Incremental, Marginal, and Component VaR. Sunguard. 2004.
Epperlein, E., Smillie, A. Cracking VaR with kernels. RISK, 2006, vol. 19, 70-74.
Gouriéroux, Christian, Laurent, Jean-Paul and Olivier Scaillet. Sensitivity analysis of value at risk. Journal of Empirical Finance, 2000, Vol. 7, 225-245.
Keel, Simon and Ardia, David. Generalized marginal risk. Aeris CAPITAL discussion paper.
Laurent Favre and Jose-Antonio Galeano. Mean-Modified Value-at-Risk Optimization with Hedge Funds. Journal of Alternative Investment, Fall 2002, v 5.
Martellini, Lionel, and Volker Ziemann. Improved Forecasts of Higher-Order Comoments and Implications for Portfolio Selection. 2007. EDHEC Risk and Asset Management Research Centre working paper.
Return to RiskMetrics: Evolution of a Standard http://www.riskmetrics.com/publications/techdocs/r2rovv.html
Zangari, Peter. A VaR Methodology for Portfolios that include Options. 1996. RiskMetrics Monitor, First Quarter, 4-12.
See Also
SharpeRatio.modified
chart.VaRSensitivity
VaR.gpd
VaR.norm
VaR.backtest
Return.clean
Examples
data(edhec) # first do normal VaR calc VaR(edhec, p=.95, method="historical") # now use Gaussian VaR(edhec, p=.95, method="gaussian") # now use modified Cornish Fisher calc to take non-normal distribution into account VaR(edhec, p=.95, method="modified") # now use p=.99 VaR(edhec, p=.99) # or the equivalent alpha=.01 VaR(edhec, p=.01) # now with outliers squished VaR(edhec, clean="boudt") # add Component VaR for the equal weighted portfolio VaR(edhec, clean="boudt", portfolio_method="component")
[Package PerformanceAnalytics version 0.9.9-5 Index]
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