Value at Risk
Value at Risk
Value at Risk
Value at risk (VAR or sometimes VaR) has been called the "new science of risk management", but you don't need
to be a scientist to use VAR. Here, we look at the idea behind VAR and the three basic methods of calculating it.
What is the most I can - with a 95% or 99% level of confidence - expect to lose in dollars over the
next month?
What is the maximum percentage I can - with 95% or 99% confidence - expect to lose over the next
year?
Now you can see, how the "VAR question" has three elements: a relatively high level of confidence (typically
either 95% or 99%), a time period (a day, a month or a year) and an estimate of investment loss (expressed
either in dollar or percentage terms).
1. Historical Method
The historical method simply re-organizes actual historical returns, putting them in order from worst to best.
It then assumes that history will repeat itself, from a risk perspective.
The QQQ started trading in Mar 1999, and if we calculate each daily return, we produce a rich data set of almost
1,400 points. Let's put them in a histogram that compares the frequency of return "buckets". For example, at the
highest point of the histogram (the highest bar), there were more than 250 days when the daily return was between
0% and 1%. At the far right, you can barely see a tiny bar at 13%; it represents the one single day (in Jan 2000)
within a period of five-plus years when the daily return for the QQQ was a stunning 12.4%.
Notice the red bars that compose the "left tail" of the histogram. These are the lowest 5% of daily returns (since
the returns are ordered from left to right, the worsts are always the "left tail"). The red bars run from daily losses
of 4% to 8%. Because these are the worst 5% of all daily returns, we can say with 95% confidence that the worst
daily loss will not exceed 4%. Put another way, we expect with 95% confidence that our gain will exceed -4%.
That is VAR in a nutshell. Let's re-phrase the statistic into both percentage and dollar terms: With 95%
confidence, we expect that our worst daily loss will not exceed 4%.
If we invest $100, we are 95% confident that our worst daily loss will not exceed $4 ($100 x -4%).
You can see that VAR indeed allows for an outcome that is worse than a return of -4%. It does not express
absolute certainty but instead makes a probabilistic estimate. If we want to increase our confidence, we need only
to "move to the left" on the same histogram, to where the first two red bars, at -8% and -7% represent the worst
1% of daily returns:
With 99% confidence, we expect that the worst daily loss will not exceed 7%.
Or, if we invest $100, we are 99% confident that our worst daily loss will not exceed $7.
To summarize, we ran 100 hypothetical trials of monthly returns for the QQQ. Among them, two outcomes were
between -15% and -20%; and three were between -20% and 25%. That means the worst five outcomes (that is,
the worst 5%) were less than -15%. The Monte Carlo simulation therefore leads to the following VAR-type
conclusion: with 95% confidence, we do not expect to lose more than 15% during any given month.