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Abstract:
When investment or hedging views are generated on a factor which is not directly investible, creating a quality factor proxy or mimicking portfolio becomes a basic implementation requirement. For fundamental factors, traditional factor-mimicking techniques include the Fama-French (FF) factor-ranking approach (Fama-French, 1993), and constrained optimisation that controls portfolio exposure to factors. In a seemingly different connection, Cheung (2009B) shows how to construct factor portfolios in the Augmented Black-Litterman (ABL) framework, which makes its intrinsic choice of factor-mimicking technique. In this paper, we test the performance of this technique, along with traditional techniques. Our results show that the ABL factor-mimicking technique is more efficient. This article features: - - A brief review of two families of traditional and the new ABL FM techniques; - A simulation-based testing methodology that isolates the FM quality issue from peripheral risk model and view quality issues, thereby avoiding unnecessary joint tests; and - Numerical comparison between these techniques, leading to concrete evidence that the ABL technique is more efficient.
factor mimicking, portfolio construction, Augmented Black-Litterman (ABL), factor tilt, Fama-French, factor ranking, factor risk model, optimisation, OLS, GLS
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