David Harding - A Critique of Sharpe Ratio
David Harding - A Critique of Sharpe Ratio
David Harding - A Critique of Sharpe Ratio
sorts of distribution, vulnerable, like LTCM, to a major cataclysm. Some trading approaches which are swift to take profit but run losses may also twist the statistics to their advantage, while the serial correlation of monthly returns common in the more illiquid hedge fund strategies (e.g. convertible arbitrage) can lead to a substantial overstatement of Sharpe ratios (Asness et al. 2001; Lo 2001). Sharpe Justice? Rewarding the right and punishing the wrong thing. Even if stationarity and parametricity criteria are met, the Sharpe ratio can have some perverse attributes. The Sharpe ratio appears at first blush to reward returns (good) and penalise risks (bad). Upon closer inspection, things are not so simple. The standard deviation takes into account the distance of each return from the mean, positive or negative. By this token, large positive returns increase the perception of risk as though they could as easily be negative, which for a dynamic investment strategy may not be the case. Large positive returns are penalised, and thus the removal of the highest returns from the distribution can increase the Sharpe ratio: a case of reductio ad absurdum for Sharpe ratio as a universal measure of quality! We might suggest an improvement by considering only the negative semi-standard deviation for the denominator, a measure known as the Sortino ratio. However it still remains vital that the semi-standard deviation used is meaningful, in the sense that it is calculated from a sufficiently well-understood return distribution, where the assumptions of stationarity and parametricity can be made. A second reductio ad absurdum scenario is one in which the return distribution produces a string of very small but consistent profits which will produce a very high Sharpe ratio with very little return. An example would be investing in short-term AAA commercial paper, which should consistently produce a little over risk-free (e.g. government paper), but where the Sharpe ratio would not be a good measure of skill at all. While this weakness might be picked up in other tests, it may not be, even in quite a long data sample. Indeed, when faced with these sorts of time series, the attraction of raw return as a statistic reasserts itself. Who would prefer to make 0.01% over risk-free each month rather than 1% with a standard deviation of 1%? These reductio ad absurdum scenarios may seem like extreme cases but they do point out the danger of relying slavishly on any single measure for assessing product quality for risky investments. Furthermore, practitioners will know that none of the dangers that are pointed out here are theoretical. They are all mirrored in the (faulty) decision-making processes of investors who overvalue short run consistent returns and biased return-generating processes. Suggested solutions include paying more attention to stationarity and parametricity in making estimates of future return and risk from manager track records; flexibility in design of appropriate statistics for measuring quality for investment strategies, more use of semivariance than variance as a risk measure; and a revival of return as a quality statistic (albeit long term return subject to some risk constraint).
References
Asness, C., R. Krail & J. Liew 2001 Do Hedge Funds Hedge? Working Paper, AQR Capital LLC. Goetzman, W., J. Ingersoll, M. Spiegel & I. Welch 2002 Sharpening Sharpe Ratios, Working Paper. Lo, A.W. 2001 The Statistics of Sharpe Ratios, forthcoming in Financial Analysts Journal. Sharpe, W.F. 1994 The Sharpe Ratio, Journal of Portfolio Management.