Hedge Fund Performance
and Changing Factor Loadings
In Chapter 24, we pointed out that an impor-
tant assumption underlying conventional
performance evaluation is that the portfolio
manager maintains a stable risk profile over
time. But hedge funds are designed to be
opportunistic and have considerable flexibil-
ity to change that profile. This too can make
performance evaluation tricky. If risk is not
constant, then estimated alphas will be biased
if we use a standard, linear index model. And
if the risk profile changes in systematic man-
ner with the expected return on the market,
performance evaluation is even more difficult.
To see why, look at Figure 26.4 , which
illustrates the characteristic line of a per-
fect market timer (see Chapter 24, Section
24.4) who engages in no security selection
but moves funds from T-bills into the market
portfolio only when the market will outper-
form bills. The characteristic line is non-
linear, with a slope of 0 when the market’s
excess return is negative, and a slope of 1
when it is positive. But a naïve attempt to
estimate a regression equation from this pat-
tern would result in a fitted line with a slope
between 0 and 1, and a positive alpha. Nei-
ther statistic accurately describes the fund.
As we noted in Chapter 24, and as is evi-
dent from Figure 26.4 , an ability to conduct
perfect market timing is much like obtaining
a call option on the underlying portfolio with-
out having to pay for it. Similar nonlinearities
would arise if the fund actually buys or writes
options. Figure 26.5 , panel A illustrates the
case of a fund that holds a stock portfolio and
writes put options on it, and panel B illustrates
the case of a fund that holds a stock portfo-
lio and writes call options. In both cases, the
characteristic line is steeper when portfolio
returns are poor—in other words, the fund
has greater sensitivity to the market when it is
falling than when it is rising. This is the oppo-
site profile that would arise from timing abil-
ity, which is much like acquiring rather than
writing options, and therefore would give the
fund greater sensitivity to market advances.
14
Return to Perfect Market Timer
Fitted Regression Line
Portfolio Return
Market Return
r
f
Figure 26.4
Characteristic line of a perfect market timer.
The true characteristic line is kinked, with a shape like that
of a call option. Fitting a straight line to the relationship
will result in misestimated slope and intercept.
Stock Alone
Stock Alone
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