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Lessons from naïve diversification about the risk-reward trade-off
Institution:1. Department of Economics, University of Victoria, Canada;2. Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Queen’s University, Canada;3. Beedie School of Business, Simon Fraser University, Canada;1. School of Management and Logistic Science, German Jordanian University, Amman 11180, Jordan;2. Faculty of Economics and Administrative Sciences, Yarmouk University, Irbid 21163, Jordan;3. Faculty of Business, Sohar University, Sohar, Oman;4. University of Dundee, School of Business, DD1 4HN Dundee, Scotland, UK
Abstract:Studies of naïve diversification show that average total portfolio risk declines asymptotically as number of stocks increases. Recent work shows that a significant amount of idiosyncratic risk remains, even for portfolios with large numbers of stocks. The corresponding shocks are non-trivial. For example, more than half of all equal-weighted portfolios with 100 stocks have better than a 16 percent chance of an annual shock at least as large as about half of the annualized mean excess return on the U.S. total stock market index over July 1963–June 2018. I perform a simulation analysis of portfolio reward-to-risk as well as the components of total portfolio risk. On average, investors do not appear to be rewarded for exposure to non-systematic risk. The cross-sectional distribution of the true Sharpe ratio rises and its dispersion shrinks significantly as the number of stocks in the portfolio increases, whereas the cross-sectional distribution of the true non-systematic risk falls and its dispersion shrinks significantly as the number of stocks in the portfolio increases. This pattern appears regardless of the true asset pricing model for generating security returns, the portfolio weighting method, or specification of security alphas.
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