In: Root » Legal and finance » Investing » Using Technical Analysis To Manage Risk And Maintain Top Quartile Performance
To manage an effective risk management solution requires more than the calculation of VaR. Ultimately a successful risk management program requires the execution of an effective hedge. Technical analysis is a vital element of this strategy. Recent market reversals brought about by the Sub-Prime mortgage melt down is clearly a significant market correcting event. No matter if you work in the risk department of a large bank with many employees or a small fund of funds as co-manager, you share the same basic concerns regarding the management of your portfolio(s)
It remains common in the financial industry to hear experienced Portfolio Managers state their risk management program consists of timing the market using their superior asset picking skills. When questioned a little further it becomes apparent that some confusion exists when it comes to hedging and the use of derivatives as a risk management tool. Risk management analysis can certainly be an intensive process for institutions like banks or insurance companies who tend to have many diverse divisions each with differing mandates and ability to add to the profit center of the parent company. However, not all companies are this complex. While hedge funds and pension plans can have a large asset base, they tend to be straight forward in the determination of risk. While Value-at-Risk commonly known as VaR goes back many years, it was not until 1994 when J.P. Morgan bank developed its RiskMetrics model that VaR became a staple for financial institutions to measure their risk exposure. In its simplest terms, VaR measures the potential loss of a portfolio over a given time horizon, usually 1 day or 1 week, and determines the likelihood and magnitude of an adverse market movement. Thus, if the VaR on an asset determines a loss of $10 million at a one-week, 95% confidence level, then there is a 5% chance the value of the portfolio will drop more than $10 million over any given week in the year. The drawback of VaR is its inability to determine how much of a loss greater than $10 million will occur. This does not reduce its effectiveness as a critical risk measurement tool. A sound risk management strategy must be integrated with the derivatives trading department. Now that the Portfolio Manager is aware of the risk he faces, he must implement some form of risk reducing strategy to reduce the likelihood of an unexpected market or economic event from reducing his portfolio value by $10 million or more. 3 options are available.
Hedging is really very simple, and once you understand the concept, the mechanics will astound you in their simplicity. Let's examine a $100 million equity portfolio that tracks the S&P 500 and a VaR calculation of $10 million. An experienced CTA will recommend the Portfolio Manager sell short $10 million S&P 500 index futures on the Futures exchange. Now if the portfolio losses $10 million the hedge will gain $10 million. The net result is zero loss. Some critics will argue the market correcting event may not happen for many years and the result of the loss from the hedge will adversely affect returns. While true, there is an answer to this problem which is hotly debated. After all, the whole purpose of implementing a hedge is because of the inability to accurately predict the timing of these significant market correcting events. The answer is the use of technical analysis to assist in the placement of buy and sell orders for your hedge. Technical analysis has the ability to remove emotional decisions from trading. It also provides the trader with an unbiased view of recent events and trends as well as longer term events and trends. For example, a head and shoulders formation or a double top will indicate an important rally may be coming to an end with an imminent correction to follow. While timing may be in dispute, there is no question a full hedge is warranted. Reaching a major support level might warrant the unwinding of 30% of the hedge with the expectation of a pull back. A rounding bottom formation should indicate the removal of the hedge in its entirety while awaiting the commencement of a major rally. It is evident that significant market correcting events occur infrequently, in the neighbourhood of every 10 to 15 years. Yet many minor corrections and pullbacks can seriously damage returns, fund performance and reputation. If you have ever been confronted with upcoming quarterly earnings or a topping formation which has caused you to consider liquidation then you should have first considered a hedge used in conjunction with the evidence from a well thought out analysis of technical indicators. Together they are a powerful tool, but only for those who have the insight to consider asset protection as important as big returns. I guarantee your competition understands and so does your clients who are becoming more sophisticated each year. It's important that you do too. Dwayne Strocen is a registered Commodity Trading Advisor specializing in analyzing and hedging Market and Operational Risk using exchange traded and OTC derivatives. Website: http://www.genuineCTA.com. View in depth information about Who We Are and the benefits of hedging your risk. |
legal disclaimer
Our website is not responsible for the information contained by this article. Web-articles is a free articles resource.
Suggestion: If you need fresh, daily updated content for your website, feel free to use our service. Click here for more information.
related articles
In the old days, only the wizards of Wall Street had enough information at their fingertips to evaluate stocks and other investments. A tickertape told them the value of each stock. Expensive newspapers, magazines, and newsletters told them about trends, investments worth buying, and investments worth shunning. Nowadays, however, anyone with a PC can plug into the Internet and find all kinds of information about investing. Finding out the current value of a stock has become as easy as typing its ticker symbol in ...
Michael (not his real name) has just been promoted to corporate training manager for a large manufacturing company. But just two years ago, he was thought to be failing miserably in his former position of field training manager. At that time, Michael’s job was to oversee training in his company’s manufacturing plants. Michael says that he dramatically turned around the perception that he was failing by making only one change: He started reporting the progress of his trainees in a way that underscored the finan...
3. How the ROI Game Works in investing
How the ROI Game Works When people say “my return-on-investment” or “my ROI” or “my value” for a program, sometimes they are asking for a number such as 125 percent, but more often, they are not. They are using ROI as a codeword a codeword that means something different for each person who uses it. To see how fast the definition of value changes and why it is important to be able to connect your answer to what is meant by each individual person, let’s reminisce about a childhood game of com...
4. A financial value chain is defined as a cascading
Translating Value Through the Chain Communicating value seems difficult because it is invisible. If the terms for value at each layer become visible, then understanding the code for value suddenly becomes easier to do. A financial value chain is defined as a cascading, linked set of measures where the left-most measure is a broad, financially based measure of a Senior executive and the right-most measure is a specific, performance-based measure of an Individual contributor. Senior management is concerned about the organizat...
5. An Overview of What an Organization Will Value
An Overview of What an Organization Will Value There are many, many types of organizations around the world. Organizations may be publicly held (that is, they sell stock, or portions of ownership, to the general public), or they may be privately held. They may be gigantic or very small, for profit or nonprofit. Organizations may be within the government, provide education, or sell commercial products or other services. The industries that these organizations serve are equally varied. The organization may be a manufact...
6. Senior manager top line revenue
A Balancing Act Managing profit, position, and cash is a constant balancing act. The final part of knowing what keeps Senior-level managers (and, therefore, everybody else) awake at night requires that you understand how the organization maintains an optimal balance among these three imperatives. Senior managers monitor balance by using ratios. Ratios are a comparison of how large one type of profit, position, or cash measure is in relation to another. Examples of common ratios are inventory turnover ratio, return-on-assets (ROA), ...
7. Guide To Oil and Gas Investment
With everyone’s attention focused on the “crisis” in the financial markets, many are overlooking the fact that there are still good investment avenues open if you know where to find them and how to evaluate them. One such avenue is oil and gas and this article will show you why it is still a good investment, and how you can evaluate the ones you find. Let me clarify that I am specifically talking about investing in oil & gas drilling programs. There are other vehicles to invest in the energy industry but they are curren...










