4.6 Article

Calculating CVaR and bPOE for common probability distributions with application to portfolio optimization and density estimation

Journal

ANNALS OF OPERATIONS RESEARCH
Volume 299, Issue 1-2, Pages 1281-1315

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10479-019-03373-1

Keywords

Conditional value-at-risk; Buffered probability of exceedance; Superquantile; Density estimation; Portfolio optimization

Funding

  1. Naval Postgraduate School's Research Initiation Program

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The paper introduces the importance of conditional value-at-risk and value-at-risk in characterizing the tails of probability distributions, as well as the buffered probability of exceedance method. Research shows that minimizing buffered probability of exceedance for finding optimal portfolios has advantages over minimizing superquantiles, and introduces a method of using superquantiles for parametric density estimation.
Conditional value-at-risk (CVaR) and value-at-risk, also called the superquantile and quantile, are frequently used to characterize the tails of probability distributions and are popular measures of risk in applications where the distribution represents the magnitude of a potential loss. buffered probability of exceedance (bPOE) is a recently introduced characterization of the tail which is the inverse of CVaR, much like the CDF is the inverse of the quantile. These quantities can prove very useful as the basis for a variety of risk-averse parametric engineering approaches. Their use, however, is often made difficult by the lack of well-known closed-form equations for calculating these quantities for commonly used probability distributions. In this paper, we derive formulas for the superquantile and bPOE for a variety of common univariate probability distributions. Besides providing a useful collection within a single reference, we use these formulas to incorporate the superquantile and bPOE into parametric procedures. In particular, we consider two: portfolio optimization and density estimation. First, when portfolio returns are assumed to follow particular distribution families, we show that finding the optimal portfolio via minimization of bPOE has advantages over superquantile minimization. We show that, given a fixed threshold, a single portfolio is the minimal bPOE portfolio for an entire class of distributions simultaneously. Second, we apply our formulas to parametric density estimation and propose the method of superquantiles (MOS), a simple variation of the method of moments where moments are replaced by superquantiles at different confidence levels. With the freedom to select various combinations of confidence levels, MOS allows the user to focus the fitting procedure on different portions of the distribution, such as the tail when fitting heavy-tailed asymmetric data.

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