I was browsing this forum to learn more about PP and found Clive's discussion of Volatility Balancing particularly interesting. (It was in the thread about PP in Japan.)Have a read through my Balanced Diversified Volatility web pages at http://www.jfholdings.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk/ and it might help throw some light on the matter (or just confuse you moreYour strategy of volatility weighing is interesting
If you understand the concepts behind the BDV then you'll get a better feel for how a Japan like exception can occur when using equal weightings.
The normal weightings in the PP is 25% each for Stocks, Long Term Bonds, Gold and Cash.
However, based on each category's historical volatility, Clive came up with different set of weights that seem to reduce the overall portfolio's volatility.
Using Simba's backtesting spreadsheet, I balanced the weights based on volatility in the following securities and came up with:
17.97% Small Cap Value
11.64% Emerging Markets
32.79% Long Term Goverment Bonds
25% 2 Year ST Treasury (Used instead of Cash)
12.60% Gold
1972 - 2009 rebalanced yearly
11.18% CAGR
0.76 Sharpe
2.94 Sortino
2.19% Down SD
6.20% Up SD
Compare this to:
PP
25% TSM
25% LTGB
25% Money Market
25% Gold
9.10% CAGR
0.46 Sharpe
1.69 Sortino
2.59% Down SD
6.96% Up SD
Modified PP
25% TSM
25% LTGB
25% 2 Year ST Treasury (instead of Cash)
25% Gold
9.53% CAGR
0.50 Sharpe
2.01 Sortino
2.39% Down SD
7.08% Up SD
Paul Boyer PP (from MadMoneyMachine.com)
12.5% SCV
12.5% EM
25% LTGB
25% 2 Year ST Treasury (instead of Cash)
25% Gold
11.26% CAGR
0.68 Sharpe
2.72 Sortino
2.42% Down SD
6.79% Up SD
The most surprising result is how smooth the graph is from 1972 to 2009 by only adjusting the weights based on relative volatility. I guess this makes since they have low correlation.
Anyone else considering volatility balancing for PP?