Hedge Fund Risk Fundamentals - Solving the Risk Management and Transparency Challenge
by Richard Horwitz
pdf, 7.33m
In the constantly evolving hedge fund marketplace, nothing is more central - but in many ways, more amorphous and elusive - than risk. Yet there remains no standard for analyzing and measuring risk within this highly secretive, largely unregulated field, leaving the thousands of hedge funds - and the tens of thousands of hedge fund investors - in dangerously dim light. The industry has not solved the "transparency" challenge - communicating risk to investors without disclosing proprietary information.
Hedge Fund Risk Fundamentals is the first book to bring these issues to the forefront. With clarity, concision, and minimal math, Richard Horwitz lays out the key components and the cutting-edge processes in the field of hedge fund risk management today. Against that backdrop he presents a groundbreaking utility destined to set the standard for transparency and risk management within the hedge fund universe.
You'll learn why, when it comes to risk management, 1 + 1 = 1.41. For all of those perplexed by the difficulties of assessing risk in hedge fund investing, Horwitz's concepts make for an invaluable road map and a demystifying resource that hedge funds and investors at all levels will find indispensable.
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Contents of Hedge Fund Risk Fundamentals |
Foreword by Ramon Koss Preface Introduction
Part One: The Components of Risk
1. Volatility Risks in Hedge Funds versus Traditional Investments The Distribution of Hedge Fund Returns Value at Risk (VAR)
2. Diversification The Power of Diversification Systematic Biases Overdiversification
3 . Leverage Financing Leverage Borrowing Leverage Notional Leverage Unlevered Risk Instrument Risk Construction Leverage What Is the Right Amount of Leverage?
4. Illiquidity Planning in Case of Crisis The Size Factor Elements in an Escape Plan The Cost of Illiquid Redemption Policies Choosing among Alternatives Calculating the Opportunity Cost of Illiquidity
Part Two: Market Risk Management
5. Measuring Risk Sell-Side Heritage Normal Market Behavior Will History Repeat? Risk Measures Based on Actual Fund Returns Risk Measures Based on Simulated Fund Returns Crisis Market Behavior
6. Understanding the Source of Risk Slicing and Dicing or Bucketing Index-Based Benchmarks Value at Risk (VaR) Risk-Factor Framework Marginal Risk Measures
7. Risk Visualization and Articulation Comparative Statistics Risk Visualization Techniques Communicating Risk in "Hedge-Speak"
8. Risk Culture Integrating Risk Management into All Hedge Fund Processes Style Drift versus Nimbleness Personality Risks Status Issues Environment Issues
Part Three: Other Risk Processes
9. Non-Market Risk Management Systems and Procedures Organizational Issues Disciplined Processes
10. Constructing a Fund Value Creation Levers Shorting Hedging Overvalued Positions Relative Misvaluations Illiquid Securities Leverage Convexity Nimbleness Establishing a Basis in which to View the Construction Balancing Risk and Return
11. Performance Attribution Assessing Primary Sources of Returns Other Factors in Performance Attribution
12. Risk Budgeting Risk Budgeting Self-Assessment Definition of Risk Budgeting Formal Risk Budgeting A Management Process, Not a Back-Office Tool A Common Language Managing Complex Causal Relationships A Comprehensive and Integrated Approach Integrated Systems Support the Process How Formal Should Your Risk Management Be?
Part Four: Risk from the Investor's Viewpoint
13. NAV/Return Reporting Lack of Documentation Inefficiencies Incomplete Reporting Lack of Precision Misleading Measures Masking Risk Dressing Up Returns
14 Constructing a Portfolio of Funds Integrating Asset Allocation, Manager Selection, and Portfolio Construction Understand Manager Risks Understand Your Objective Adopt a Prospective Outlook Focus on Marginal Risk and Return Measures Construct the Portfolio Incrementally Minimize Exposure to the Underlying Market Manage Secondary Risk Exposures Maximize Idiosyncratic Risks Limit Offsetting Exposures Diversify the Portfolio Plan for the Worst Consider Using Optimizers
15. Risk Due Diligence Analyzing Previous Portfolios Determining Transparency and Risk Culture
16. Transparency Changing Investor Requirements The Political Environment The Pros and Cons of Position Disclosure Current Practices
Part Five: The Solution
17. Industry Standard Solution Reporting Standards - A Common Language The Case for Standardization
18. The Risk Fundamentals® Solution Overview of the Service NAV/Return Reporting The Risk Fundamentals System The Risk Fundamentals Statistics Distributed Solution Standardization with Flexibility Risk Budgeting Support Effective Risk Communication Interpreting Risk Management Reporting Concentrations Leverage Liquidity Risk Factors Historical Simulation Stress Tests Convexity Risk-Return Analyses Constructing a Fund Constructing a Portfolio of Funds Performance Attribution
19. Summary
Appendix Glossary Index
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