The Effects of Credit Risk on Dynamic Portfolio Management: A New Computational Approach
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
2-2009
Abstract
The study investigates the role of credit risk in a continuous time stochastic asset allocation model, since the traditional dynamic framework does not provide credit risk flexibility. The general model of the study extends the traditional dynamic efficiency framework by explicitly deriving the optimal value function for the infinite horizon stochastic control problem via a weighted volatility measure of market and credit risk. The model’s optimal strategy was then compared to that obtained from a benchmark Markowitz-type dynamic optimization framework to determine which specification adequately reflects the optimal terminal investment returns and strategy under credit and market risks. The paper shows that an investor’s optimal terminal return is lower than typically indicated under the traditional mean-variance framework during periods of elevated credit risk. Hence I conclude that, while the traditional dynamic mean-variance approach may indicate the ideal, in the presence of credit-risk it does not accurately reflect the observed optimal returns, terminal wealth and portfolio selection strategies.
Recommended Citation
Dunbar, Kwamie, "The Effects of Credit Risk on Dynamic Portfolio Management: A New Computational Approach" (2009). Economics Working Papers. Paper 2009-03.
Comments
University of Connecticut Department of Economics Working Paper Series; Working Paper 2009-03R, January 2009, revised February 2009.