Discounted maximum loss

Discounted maximum loss, also known as worst-case risk measure, is the present value of the worst-case scenario for a financial portfolio.

In investment, in order to protect the value of an investment, one must consider all possible alternatives to the initial investment. How one does this comes down to personal preference; however, the worst possible alternative is generally considered to be the benchmark against which all other options are measured. The present value of this worst possible outcome is the discounted maximum loss.

Definition edit

Given a finite state space  , let   be a portfolio with profit   for  . If   is the order statistic the discounted maximum loss is simply  , where   is the discount factor.

Given a general probability space  , let   be a portfolio with discounted return   for state  . Then the discounted maximum loss can be written as   where   denotes the essential infimum.[1]

Properties edit

  • The discounted maximum loss is the expected shortfall at level  . It is therefore a coherent risk measure.
  • The worst-case risk measure   is the most conservative (normalized) risk measure in the sense that for any risk measure   and any portfolio   then  .[1]

Example edit

As an example, assume that a portfolio is currently worth 100, and the discount factor is 0.8 (corresponding to an interest rate of 25%):

probability value
of event of the portfolio
40% 110
30% 70
20% 150
10% 20

In this case the maximum loss is from 100 to 20 = 80, so the discounted maximum loss is simply  

References edit

  1. ^ a b Schied, Alexander (2006). "Risk Measures and Robust Optimization Problems". Stochastic Models. 22 (4): 753–831. doi:10.1080/15326340600878677. ISSN 1532-6349. S2CID 122890427.