Is historical data a good estimate of the future risk of funds? - A study on the Swedish Hedge Fund market
Abstract
Predicting the future is something that every person trading with financial instruments or
commodities, which have prices that depend on a future demand, tries to do. The objective of
this thesis has been to examine whether or not historical returns are a good way to measure a
funds future risk. To do this a new model for fund evaluation has been developed called the
outside value method. The outside value method uses linear regression to build a predicted future
average return based on the historical performance, and the historical standard deviation to build
a prediction interval of 95% surrounding the average line. The model is built up using historical
data up until one year before the last observed value. The prediction is then compared with the
actual performance of this last observed year. Given the statistical prediction, 95% of the
observation should lie within the interval which in this study would mean that approximately 10
out of the 204 observations.
To limit the scope of the thesis one particular category of funds has been selected, hedge funds.
Hedge funds is a collective name for a lot of different funds that uses different kinds of special
trading strategies, such as short selling and leveraging by taking on debt. There is no clear
definition on what a hedge fund is; however, most hedge funds are surrounded by some sort of
secrecy regarding their trading strategy, something that strongly reduces the amount of
information visible to the investor. Hedge funds claim to be a more stable investment since they
aim to produce an absolute return no matter in which direction the market is going. The claim of
stability together with the lack of information makes hedge funds a particularly interesting
category for conducting a risk study.
Of the 204 observations 8 ended up outside the interval which is close enough to the ten
expected for the conclusion to be drawn that the hypothesis is true. Even though the average
leads to this general conclusion there are still single outside values in the model that occurs with
probability as low as 3,34499*10^-5, which may lead to questioning of the overall results. The key
question, to whether or not the outside-value method is a useful tool for predicting the future
risk of funds, is if the interval is narrow enough for a prediction to be of any value. This is
something that is left for discussion and most probably something that is connected to personal
preferences.
Degree
Student essay
Date
2008-02-06Author
Irding, Martin
Lydén, Joacim
Keywords
Hedge funds, Risk, Regression, Prediction interval.
Series/Report no.
Industriell och finansiell ekonomi
07/08:4
Language
eng