| Is the Stable Frontier "Efficient" | |||||
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| One learns in school that Modern
Portfolio Theory offers "gains from diversification", the
mathematics of not putting all your eggs in one basket. An extension of
that notion is the so-called "Efficient Frontier", a sidewise
parabolic curve the upper half of which represents the way one can optimize
return while minimizing risk. The farthest left point of that curve, the
"nose" of the bullet-shaped parabola represents the "minimum
variance portfolio". As we have seen, the assumption of normality -
key to efficient set mathematics - understates risk. Thus it would seem
likely that if returns are distributed non-normal stable, as real estate
returns appear to be, the minimum variance real estate portfolio has greater
risk than theory predicts.
Below five pairs of efficient frontiers cycle and repeat in the graph. Each pair represents two portfolios, one composed of three assets drawn from a non-normal, stable sample (where alpha = 1.4, a value common to private real estate return distributions); the other assumes the sample is distributed normally (where alpha = 2). | |||||