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Constraint Specification Using a Portfolio Object

Constraints for Efficient Frontier

This example computes the efficient frontier of portfolios consisting of three different assets, INTC, XON, and RD, given a list of constraints. The expected returns for INTC, XON, and RD are respectively as follows:

ExpReturn = [0.1 0.2 0.15]; 

The covariance matrix is

ExpCovariance  =  [ 0.005   -0.010    0.004;
                   -0.010    0.040   -0.002;
                    0.004   -0.002    0.023];
  • Constraint 1

    • Allow short selling up to 10% of the portfolio value in any asset, but limit the investment in any one asset to 110% of the portfolio value.

  • Constraint 2

    • Consider two different sectors, technology and energy, with the following table indicating the sector each asset belongs to.

      Asset

      INTC

      XON

      RD

      Sector

      Technology

      Energy

      Energy

      Constrain the investment in the Energy sector to 80% of the portfolio value, and the investment in the Technology sector to 70%.

      To solve this problem, use Portfolio, passing in a list of asset constraints. Consider eight different portfolios along the efficient frontier:

      NumPorts = 8;
      

      To introduce the asset bounds constraints specified in Constraint 1, create the matrix AssetBounds, where each column represents an asset. The upper row represents the lower bounds, and the lower row represents the upper bounds. Since the bounds are the same for each asset, only one pair of bounds is needed because of scalar expansion.

      AssetBounds = [-0.1, 1.1];
      

      Constraint 2 must be entered in two parts, the first part defining the groups, and the second part defining the constraints for each group. Given the information above, you can build a matrix of 1s and 0s indicating whether a specific asset belongs to a group. Each column represents an asset, and each row represents a group. This example has two groups: the technology group, and the energy group. Create the matrix Groups as follows.

      Groups =  [0   1   1; 
                 1   0   0];
      

      The GroupBounds matrix allows you to specify an upper and lower bound for each group. Each row in this matrix represents a group. The first column represents the minimum allocation, and the second column represents the maximum allocation to each group. Since the investment in the Energy sector is capped at 80% of the portfolio value, and the investment in the Technology sector is capped at 70%, create the GroupBounds matrix using this information.

      GroupBounds = [0   0.80;
                     0   0.70];
      

      Now use Portfolio to obtain the vectors and arrays representing the risk, return, and weights for each of the eight portfolios computed along the efficient frontier. A budget constraint is added to ensure that the portfolio weights sum to 1.

      p = Portfolio('AssetMean', ExpReturn, 'AssetCovar', ExpCovariance);
      p = setBounds(p, AssetBounds(1), AssetBounds(2));
      p = setBudget(p, 1, 1);
      p = setGroups(p, Groups, GroupBounds(:,1), GroupBounds(:,2));
      
      PortWts = estimateFrontier(p, NumPorts);
      
      [PortRisk, PortReturn] = estimatePortMoments(p, PortWts);
      
      PortRisk
      PortReturn
      PortWts
      
      PortRisk =
      
          0.0416
          0.0499
          0.0624
          0.0767
          0.0920
          0.1100
          0.1378
          0.1716
      
      
      PortReturn =
      
          0.1279
          0.1361
          0.1442
          0.1524
          0.1605
          0.1687
          0.1768
          0.1850
      
      
      PortWts =
      
          0.7000    0.6031    0.4864    0.3696    0.2529    0.2000    0.2000    0.2000
          0.2582    0.3244    0.3708    0.4172    0.4636    0.5738    0.7369    0.9000
          0.0418    0.0725    0.1428    0.2132    0.2835    0.2262    0.0631   -0.1000
      

      The outputs are represented as columns for the portfolio’s risk and return. Portfolio weights are identified as corresponding column vectors in a matrix.

Linear Constraint Equations

While the Portfolio object allows you to enter a fixed set of constraints related to minimum and maximum values for groups and individual assets, you often need to specify a larger and more general set of constraints when finding the optimal risky portfolio. Portfolio also addresses this need, by accepting an arbitrary set of constraints.

This example requires specifying the minimum and maximum investment in various groups.

Maximum and Minimum Group Exposure

Group

Minimum Exposure

Maximum Exposure

North America

0.30

0.75

Europe

0.10

0.55

Latin America

0.20

0.50

Asia

0.50

0.50

The minimum and maximum exposure in Asia is the same. This means that you require a fixed exposure for this group.

Also assume that the portfolio consists of three different funds. The correspondence between funds and groups is shown in the table below.

Group Membership

Group

Fund 1

Fund 2

Fund 3

North America

X

X

 

Europe

  

X

Latin America

X

  

Asia

 

X

X

Using the information in these two tables, build a mathematical representation of the constraints represented. Assume that the vector of weights representing the exposure of each asset in a portfolio is called Wts = [W1 W2 W3].

Specifically

1.

W1 + W2

0.30

2.

W1 + W2

0.75

3.

W3

0.10

4.

W3

0.55

5.

W1

0.20

6.

W1

0.50

7.

W2 + W3

=

0.50

Since you must represent the information in the form A*Wts <= b, multiply equations 1, 3 and 5 by –1. Also turn equation 7 into a set of two inequalities: W2 + W3 ≥ 0.50 and W2 + W3 ≤ 0.50. (The intersection of these two inequalities is the equality itself.) Thus

1.

-W1 - W2

-0.30

2.

W1 + W2

0.75

3.

-W3

-0.10

4.

W3

0.55

5.

-W1

-0.20

6.

W1

0.50

7.

-W2 - W3

-0.50

8.

W2 + W3

0.50

Bringing these equations into matrix notation gives

A = [-1    -1     0;
      1     1     0;
      0     0    -1;
      0     0     1;
     -1     0     0;
      1     0     0;
      0    -1    -1;
      0     1     1]

b = [-0.30;
      0.75;
     -0.10;
      0.55;
     -0.20;
      0.50;
     -0.50;
      0.50]

One approach to solving this portfolio problem is to explicitly use the setInequality function:

p = Portfolio('AssetMean', ExpReturn, 'AssetCovar', ExpCovariance);
p = setBounds(p, AssetBounds(1), AssetBounds(2));
p = setBudget(p, 1, 1);
p = setInequality(p, A, b);
PortWts = estimateFrontier(p, NumPorts);
[PortRisk, PortReturn] = estimatePortMoments(p, PortWts);

PortRisk
PortReturn
PortWts
PortRisk =

    0.0586
    0.0586
    0.0586
    0.0586
    0.0586
    0.0586
    0.0586
    0.0586


PortReturn =

    0.1375
    0.1375
    0.1375
    0.1375
    0.1375
    0.1375
    0.1375
    0.1375


PortWts =

    0.5000    0.5000    0.5000    0.5000    0.5000    0.5000    0.5000    0.5000
    0.2500    0.2500    0.2500    0.2500    0.2500    0.2500    0.2500    0.2500
    0.2500    0.2500    0.2500    0.2500    0.2500    0.2500    0.2500    0.2500
In this case, the constraints allow only one optimum portfolio. Since eight portfolios were requested, all eight portfolios are the same. Note that the solution to this portfolio problem using the setInequality function is the same as using the setGroups function in the next example (Specifying Group Constraints).

Specifying Group Constraints

The example above (Linear Constraint Equations) defines a constraint matrix that specifies a set of typical scenarios. It defines groups of assets, specifies upper and lower bounds for total allocation in each of these groups, and it sets the total allocation of one group to a fixed value. Constraints like these are common occurrences. Portfolio object enables you to simplify the creation of the constraint matrix for these and other common portfolio requirements.

An alternative approach for solving the portfolio problem is to use the Portfolio object to define:

  • A Group matrix, indicating the assets that belong to each group.

  • A GroupMin vector, indicating the minimum bounds for each group.

  • A GroupMax vector, indicating the maximum bounds for each group.

Based on the table Group Membership, build the Group matrix, with each row representing a group, and each column representing an asset.

Group = [1    1    0;
         0    0    1;
         1    0    0;
         0    1    1];

The table Maximum and Minimum Group Exposure has the information to build GroupMin and GroupMax.

GroupMin = [0.30  0.10  0.20  0.50];
GroupMax = [0.75  0.55  0.50  0.50];

Now use Portfolio and the setInequality function to obtain the vectors and arrays representing the risk, return, and weights for the portfolios computed along the efficient frontier.

p = Portfolio('AssetMean', ExpReturn, 'AssetCovar', ExpCovariance);
p = setBounds(p, AssetBounds(1), AssetBounds(2));
p = setBudget(p, 1, 1);
p = setGroups(p, Group, GroupMin, GroupMax);
PortWts = estimateFrontier(p, NumPorts);
[PortRisk, PortReturn] = estimatePortMoments(p, PortWts);

PortRisk
PortReturn
PortWts
PortRisk =

    0.0586
    0.0586
    0.0586
    0.0586
    0.0586
    0.0586
    0.0586
    0.0586


PortReturn =

    0.1375
    0.1375
    0.1375
    0.1375
    0.1375
    0.1375
    0.1375
    0.1375


PortWts =

    0.5000    0.5000    0.5000    0.5000    0.5000    0.5000    0.5000    0.5000
    0.2500    0.2500    0.2500    0.2500    0.2500    0.2500    0.2500    0.2500
    0.2500    0.2500    0.2500    0.2500    0.2500    0.2500    0.2500    0.2500

In this case, the constraints allow only one optimum portfolio. Since eight portfolios were requested, all eight portfolios are the same. Note that the solution to this portfolio problem using the setGroups function is the same as using the setInequality function in the previous example (Linear Constraint Equations).

See Also

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