Jump to content

Active risk

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Zfeinst (talk | contribs) at 17:47, 30 June 2012 (add wikilink). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

In finance, active risk refers to that segment of risk in an investment portfolio that is due to active management decisions made by the portfolio manager. It does not include any risk (return) that is merely a function of the market's movement. In addition to risk (return) from specific stock selection or industry and factor "bets," it can also include risk (return) from market timing decisions.

A portfolio’s active risk, then, is defined as the annualized standard deviation of the monthly difference between portfolio return and benchmark return. Thus, an active risk of x per cent would mean that approximately 2/3 of the portfolio’s returns (one standard deviation from mean) can be expected to fall between +x and -x per cent of the mean excess return. It may be calculated as a realized, or ex post number (derived from the actual returns of a varying portfolio) or as a forward, ex ante, or predicted number (usually based on a multifactor model defining the covariance relationships between each pair of securities in the current portfolio).

Active risk is normally called tracking error in Europe. There is no necessary or stable relationship between ex ante and ex post tracking error. Furthermore, while tracking error measures the standard deviation of active returns, it does not measure any systematic trend in those returns.

http://financial-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/Active+Risk