Description |
1 online resource (xiii, 120 pages) : illustrations (some color) |
Series |
Wiley finance series |
|
Wiley finance series.
|
Contents |
Preliminaries -- The Client Risk Profile -- Asset Selection -- Capital Market Assumptions -- Portfolio Optimization |
Summary |
"This book provides a complete taxonomy of modern methods for constructing investment portfolios. It goes beyond the simplest models and heuristics that are commonly used today and brings advances that are otherwise buried in Ph.D.-level mathematics to the financial advisor community. It covers all aspects of creating client portfolios, including choosing asset classes to invest in, selecting securities within asset classes, client risk preference assessment, portfolio construction, and portfolio rebalancing. Questions answered include: What is client utility? What utility function does mean-variance optimization assume? Is it a good representation of my client? How has the revolution in behavioral finance changed the classic utility assumption? How do you set your client's utility function parameters? How do we define asset classes? Which asset classes should we include in our asset allocation? Which optimization technique should I use given my client's utility function? Does my optimization technique account for higher order moments that are prevalent in today's alternative risk premia?"-- Provided by publisher |
Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references and index |
Notes |
Description based on online resource; title from digital title page (viewed on May 04, 2020) |
Subject |
Asset allocation.
|
|
Investments.
|
|
Portfolio management.
|
|
portfolios (financial records)
|
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BUSINESS & ECONOMICS / Finance / Wealth Management.
|
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Asset allocation
|
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Investments
|
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Portfolio management
|
Form |
Electronic book
|
LC no. |
2020004362 |
ISBN |
9781119566977 |
|
1119566975 |
|
9781119567004 |
|
1119567009 |
|