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Tetraphase Pharma Offers A Lesson In Risk Management

Summary Limit sell orders wouldn’t have protected investors from Tetraphase Pharmaceutical’s 78% plunge after hours Tuesday. Two ways for investors to limit downside risk from stock plunges like this are diversification and hedging. We examine the pros and cons of both of those methods of risk management. Tetraphase Tanks After Hours Shares of Tetraphase Pharmaceuticals (NASDAQ: TTPH ) closed up 3.54% on Tuesday, to $44.78. Less than 40 minutes later, TTPH was trading for under $10 per share after hours, as the dramatic graph below from YCharts shows. (click to enlarge) What tanked the stock, as Seeking Alpha news editor Douglas House reported , was the failure of its leading drug candidate, a broad spectrum antibiotic called Eravacycline , in a stage 3 clinical trial versus another antibiotic called Levofloxacin in the treatment of complicated urinary tract infections. Limit Sell Orders Don’t Limit The Loss A painful lesson some Tetraphase longs may learn here is that limit sell orders don’t protect against these kinds of drops. Consider, for example, a hypothetical investor who owned Tetraphase on Tuesday and didn’t want to see his position value drop by more than 20%, so he set a limit sell order at $36. The problem with this sort of limit sell order is that it won’t get you out of the stock at $36 per share, if the stock never trades at that price on its way down. Whatever price the stock opens at the next day is the price an investor would be offered for selling the stock then. Two Ways To Limit Stock-Specific Risk Two ways to limit stock-specific risk of this kind are diversification and hedging. Both have their advantages and disadvantages. The big advantage of diversification is that it doesn’t cost much.[i] As the Nobel laureate economist Harry Markowitz famously put it, “diversification is the only free lunch”. If you owned Tetraphase as part of an equal-weighted portfolio of 20 stocks on Tuesday, the worst impact it could have on your portfolio value going forward would have been -5%, because it would have comprised 5% of your portfolio. Of course, the flip side to diversification is that if a particular stock does very well, its impact to your portfolio would be similarly limited. Diversification limits the harm caused by your worst investment, but it also limits the benefit provided by your best ones. As Warren Buffett noted in a lecture at the University of Florida’s business school in 1998, If you can identify six wonderful businesses, that is all the diversification you need. And you will make a lot of money. And I can guarantee that going into the seventh one instead of putting more money into your first one is going to be terrible mistake. Very few people have gotten rich on their seventh best idea. But a lot of people have gotten rich with their best idea. Unlike diversification, hedging allows you to concentrate your assets in a handful of securities you think will do best, because your downside is strictly limited. Consider, for example, hedging with put options. Put options (or, puts) are contracts which give you the right to sell a security for a specified price (the strike price) before a specified date (the expiration date). An investor who owned 1,000 shares of Tetraphase on Tuesday and 10 put option contracts (each contract covers 100 shares) with strike prices at $40, would have been able to sell all of his Tetraphase shares for $40 on Wednesday, regardless of what price the stock was trading at then. The main drawback with hedging, though, is its cost. At Portfolio Armor , we look for optimal puts (as well as optimal collars) when hedging. Optimal puts are the ones that will give you the level of protection you are looking for at the lowest cost. A Tetraphase investor scanning for optimal puts on Tuesday against a greater-than-20% drop over the next several months, would have gotten this message, The reason he would have seen that message is that the cost of protecting against a greater-than-20% drop on Tuesday was itself greater than 20% of position value. The smallest decline threshold against which it was possible to hedge TTPH over the same time frame with optimal puts on Tuesday was against a greater-than-27% drop, and, as the image below shows, the cost of doing so was prohibitively expensive – equivalent to nearly 27% of position value. Note that, in the image above, the “cap” field is blank. If an investor had entered a figure in that field, the app would have attempted to find an optimal collar to hedge Tetraphase. A collar is a type of hedge in which an investor buys a put option for protection, and, at the same time, sells a call option, which gives another investor the right to buy the security from him at a higher strike price, by the same expiration date. The proceeds from selling the call option can offset at least part of the cost of buying the put option. An optimal collar is a collar that will give you the level of protection you want at the lowest price, while not capping your possible upside by more than you specify. In a nutshell, with a collar you may be able to reduce the cost of hedging, in return for giving up some possible upside. It was possible to hedge Tetraphase against a greater-than-20% drop over the next several months with an optimal collar on Tuesday, if an investor were willing to cap his possible upside over the same time frame at 20%. The cost of that protection would have been 8.26% of position value, which would still have been fairly pricey. Using Security Selection To Reduce Risk (and Hedging Costs) Another way to reduce risk, and to hedging costs, is to avoid stocks like Tetraphase in the first place. That may sound like hindsight at this point, but remember the hedging cost shown above was calculated using data from before the stock tanked. Hedging cost that high can be a red flag. By way of comparison, look what the cost of hedging Gilead Sciences (NASDAQ: GILD ) against the same percentage drop over the same time period with optimal puts was on Tuesday: As you can see at the bottom of the image above, Gilead cost 2.1% of position value to hedge. Tetraphase was 12.6x as expensive to hedge in the same manner. By limiting your portfolio to securities that are relatively inexpensive to hedge, you will end up avoiding some of the riskiest ones. How much should you be willing to spend to hedge? That depends, in part, on how high you estimate the potential return of your underlying securities. One approach is to calculate both hedging costs and potential returns for your best ideas, then, subtract the hedging costs from the potential returns, rank them by potential return net of hedging cost, and buy and hedge a handful of the highest ranked ones. That’s the essence of the hedged portfolio method, which we detailed in a recent article (“Keeping A Small Nest Egg From Cracking”). —————————————————————————– [i] To be precise, this isn’t quite true if you buy individual stocks rather than a low-cost index fund. All else equal, the more you diversify, the more trading costs you will incur. Disclosure: I/we have no positions in any stocks mentioned, and no plans to initiate any positions within the next 72 hours. (More…) I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.

Investing Alongside Buffett, Klarman, And Other Top Investors While Limiting Your Risk

Summary An investor can precisely limit his risk while maximizing his expected return by creating a hedged portfolio. When creating a hedged portfolio, you can start from scratch or start with a list of top picks. We lay out the second method here and provide an example. The example hedged portfolio was designed for investors willing to risk a maximum drawdown of 20%. Investors with lower risk tolerances can use a similar process, though their expected returns would likely be lower. Investing In An Uncertain Market Investors could be forgiven for wanting to limit their risk given the uncertainty about the current economic environment. Let’s recap the latest bit of news adding to the uncertainty, and then look at a way we can invest alongside some of the world’s best investors while limiting our risk. Reactions to the August jobs report released on Friday varied. The White House highlighted the positive: Our economy has now added 8.0 million jobs over the past three years, a pace that has not been exceeded since 2000. And while the economy added jobs at a somewhat slower pace in August than in recent months, the unemployment rate fell to 5.1 percent-its lowest level since April 2008-and the labor force participation rate remained stable. And the Wall Street Journal pointed out the dark cloud inside that silver lining: The labor-force participation rate stayed the same last month at 62.6%.The participation rate-the share of the population either working or actively looking for work-has been dropping for several years and is near levels last consistently recorded in the late 1970s, a time when women were entering the workforce in larger numbers. The latest reading is a result of the labor force shrinking by 41,000 last month, despite other signs of an improving jobs market. As the New York Times noted , the jobs report gave ammunition to both sides of the Fed rate debate, but, as Seeking Alpha news editor Carl Surran summarized it, the market’s verdict seemed to be negative, with the major market indexes down on Friday and all ten sectors in the red. Dealing With Uncertainty After all the analysis, no one knows what direction the market will take from here. One way to deal with uncertainty about market direction is to invest in a handful of securities you think will do well, and hedge against the possibility that you end up being wrong. That approach is systematized in the hedged portfolio method, which we detailed in a previous post (“Backtesting The Hedged Portfolio Method”). One advantage of the hedged portfolio method is that it can accommodate a broad range of risk tolerances. If you can tolerate a drawdown of more than 20%, our research (summarized in the previous post we mentioned above) suggests that with our security selection method you can achieve returns as good or better than the market over time with less risk. Maybe You Can Do Better It’s possible you can get even better returns with the hedged portfolio method by selecting your own securities. And if you’re going to do that, a good starting place for ideas is to look at what some of the best investors in the world have been buying. Seeking Alpha contributor and hedge fund manager Chris DeMuth, Jr. did just that in a recent article (“Best Q2 Picks From Top Investors”). In that article, DeMuth examined reported buys from leading investors and highlighted a number of them. These were the stocks, along with the investors who bought them: SunEdison Semiconductor (NASDAQ: SEMI ) – Seth Klarman. Precision Castparts (NYSE: PCP ) – Warren Buffett SunEdison (NYSE: SUNE ) – David Einhorn Perrigo (NYSE: PRGO ) – Stephen Mandel (former analyst for Julian Robertson) Williams (NYSE: WMB ) – Dan Loeb Danaher (NYSE: DHR ) – John Griffen (another former protege of Julian Robertson) Time Warner Cable (NYSE: TWC ) – John Paulson Baker Hughes (NYSE: BHI )- Jeff Ubben Shire (NASDAQ: SHPG ) – Leon Cooperman Office Depot (NASDAQ: ODP ) – Richard Perry Humana (NYSE: HUM ) – Larry Robbins Cigna (NYSE: CI ) – Andreas Halvorsen Altera (NASDAQ: ALTR ) – Andrew Spokes Icahn Enterprises (NASDAQ: IEP ) – Carl Icahn Brookdale Senior Living (NYSE: BKD ) – Barry Rosenstein T-Mobile (NYSE: TMUS ) – Phillippe Lafont DeMuth’s article is worth a read for some color on these stocks and investors (particularly, the less well-known investors). But we’ll start with the assumption that most of these are solid stocks, and we’ll use them as a starting point to construct a hedged portfolio for an investor who is unwilling to risk a drawdown of more than 20%, and has $1 million he wants to invest. First, though, address the issue of risk tolerance, and how it affects potential return. Risk Tolerance and Potential Return All else equal, with a hedged portfolio, the greater an investor’s risk tolerance — the greater the maximum drawdown he is willing to risk (his “threshold”, in our terminology) – the higher his potential return will be. So, we should expect that an investor who is willing to risk a 20% decline will have a chance at higher returns than one who is only willing to risk, say, a 10% drawdown. Constructing A Hedged Portfolio In the previous article mentioned above, we discussed a process investors could use to construct a hedged portfolio designed to maximize potential return while limiting risk. We’ll recap that process here briefly, and then explain how you can implement it yourself. Finally, we’ll present an example of a hedged portfolio that was constructed this way with an automated tool. The process, in broad strokes, is this: Find securities with high potential returns (we define potential return as a high-end, bullish estimate of how the security will perform). Find securities that are relatively inexpensive to hedge. Buy a handful of securities that score well on the first two criteria; in other words, buy a handful of securities with high potential returns net of their hedging costs (or, ones with high net potential returns). Hedge them. The potential benefits of this approach are twofold: If you are successful at the first step (finding securities with high potential returns), and you hold a concentrated portfolio of them, your portfolios should generate decent returns over time. If you are hedged, and your return estimates are completely wrong, on occasion — or the market moves against you — your downside will be strictly limited. How to Implement This Approach Finding promising stocks In this case, we’re going to start with the list of Q2 best picks curated by Chris DeMuth. To quantify potential returns for these stocks, you can, for example, use analysts’ price targets for them and then convert these to percentage returns from current prices. In general, though, you’ll need to use the same time frame for each of your potential return calculations to facilitate comparisons of potential returns, hedging costs, and net potential returns. Our method starts with calculations of six-month potential returns. Finding inexpensive ways to hedge these securities First, you’ll need to determine whether each of these top holdings are hedgeable. Then, whatever hedging method you use, for this example, you’d want to make sure that each security is hedged against a greater-than-20% decline over the time frame covered by your potential return calculations (our method attempts to find optimal static hedges using collars as well as protective puts going out approximately six months). And you’ll need to calculate your cost of hedging as a percentage of position value. Selecting the securities with highest net potential returns In order to determine which securities these are, out of the list above, you may need to first adjust your potential return calculations by the time frame of your hedges. For example, although our method initially calculates six-month potential returns and aims to find hedges with six months to expiration, in some cases the closest hedge expiration may be five months out. In those cases, we will adjust our potential return calculation down accordingly, because we expect an investor will exit the position shortly before the hedge expires (in general, our method and calculations are based on the assumption that an investor will hold his shares for six months, until shortly before their hedges expire or until they are called away, whichever comes first). Next, you’ll need to subtract the hedging costs you calculated in the previous step from the potential returns you calculated for each position, and exclude any security that has a negative potential return net of hedging costs. Fine-tuning portfolio construction You’ll want to stick with round lots (numbers of shares divisible by 100) to minimize hedging costs, so if you’re going to include a handful of securities from the sort in the previous step and you have a relatively small portfolio, you’ll need to take into account the share prices of the securities. Another fine-tuning step is to minimize cash that’s leftover after you make your initial allocation to round lots of securities and their respective hedges. Because each security is hedged, you won’t need a large cash position to reduce risk. And since returns on cash are so low now, by minimizing cash you can potentially boost returns. In this step, our method searches for what we call a “cash substitute”: that’s a security collared with a tight cap (1% or the current yield on a leading money market fund, whichever is higher) in an attempt to capture a better-than-cash return while keeping the investor’s downside limited according to his specifications. You could use a similar approach, or you could simply allocate leftover cash to one of the securities you selected in the previous step. Calculating Expected Returns While net potential returns are bullish estimates of how well securities will perform, net of their hedging costs, expected returns, in our terminology, are the more likely returns net of hedging costs. In a series of 25,412 backtests over an 11-year time period, we determined two things about our method of calculating potential returns: it generates alpha, and it overstates actual returns. The average actual return over the next six months in those 25,412 tests was 0.3x the average potential return calculated ahead of time. So, we use that empirically derived relationship to calculate our expected returns. An Automated Approach Here we’ll show an example of creating a hedged portfolio starting with Chris DeMuth’s best Q2 picks using the general process described above, facilitated by the automated hedged portfolio construction tool at Portfolio Armor . In the first step, we enter the ticker symbols in the “Tickers” field, the dollar amount of our investor’s portfolio (1000000), and in the third field, the maximum decline he’s willing to risk in percentage terms (20). In the second step, we are given the option of entering our own return estimates for each of these securities. One of these securities, PCP, appeared in a hedged portfolio in a previous article (“An Alternative To Cash For A Risk Averse Investor), and there, we used Portfolio Armor’s calculated potential return for it. In this case, for illustration purposes, we’ll enter a potential return for it based on the assumption that the Berkshire Hathaway deal closes at the announced price of $235 per share. For the other securities, we’ll let Portfolio Armor supply its own potential returns. A couple minutes after clicking the “Create” button, we were presented with the hedged portfolio below. The data here is as of Friday’s close. Why These Particular Securities? The site included all of the entered securities for which it calculated a positive potential return, net of hedging costs. Interestingly, one of the stocks it rejected, Icahn Enterprises , is one Chris DeMuth mentioned as a short position earlier this year, as he noted in his Best Q2 Picks article. In its fine-tuning step, Portfolio Armor added Google (NASDAQ: GOOG ) as a cash substitute. Let’s turn our attention now to the portfolio level summary for a moment. Worst-Case Scenario The “Max Drawdown” column in the portfolio level summary shows the worst-case scenario for this hedged portfolio. If every underlying security in it went to zero before the hedges expired, the portfolio would decline 19.67%. Negative Hedging Cost Note that, in this case, the total hedging cost for the portfolio was negative, -1.03%, meaning the investor would receive more income in total from selling the call legs of the collars on his positions than he spent buying the puts. Best-Case Scenario At the portfolio level, the net potential return is 13.44% over the next six months. This represents the best-case scenario, if each underlying security in the portfolio meets or exceeds its potential return. A More Likely Scenario The portfolio level expected return of 4.63% represents a conservative estimate, based on the historical relationship between our calculated potential returns and backtested actual returns. However, since these securities are picks of some of the world’s best investors, it’s possible Portfolio Armor is underestimating their returns over the next six months. By way of comparison, if you created a hedged portfolio on Friday using the same dollar amount ($1,000,000) and decline threshold (20%), but without entering any ticker symbols (i.e., you let Portfolio Armor pick the securities), the expected return for that hedged portfolio would have been 7.97%. That hedged portfolio would have only had one primary security in common with this one; as you can probably guess from the potential returns shown in the hedged portfolio above, that security was Advance Auto Parts. Each Security Is Hedged Note that each of the above securities is hedged. Google, the cash substitute, is hedged with an optimal collar with its cap set at 1%; Advance Auto Parts and Precision Castparts are hedged with optimal puts; and the remaining securities are hedged with optimal collars with their caps set at each underlying security’s potential return. Here is a closer look at the hedge for Advance Auto Parts: The cap field above is blank, because this isn’t a collar. Portfolio Armor used optimal puts in this case instead of an optimal collar because the position had a higher net potential return this way (it calculated the net potential returns both ways for each of the primary positions in the portfolio). As you can see at the bottom of the image above, the cost of this hedge was $2,500, or 2.90% of position value.[i] Note that, although this hedge had a positive hedging cost, the hedging cost for the portfolio as a whole was negative. Possibly More Protection Than Promised In some cases, hedges such as the ones in the portfolio above can provide more protection than promised. For an example of that, see this recent instablog post on hedging Tesla (NASDAQ: TSLA ). Hedged Portfolios For Smaller Investors The hedged portfolio shown above was designed for someone with $1 million to invest, but the same process, with a couple of minor adjustments, can be used for those with smaller amounts to invest. We walked through creating a hedged portfolio for someone with $30,000 to invest in an article last month (“Keeping a Small Nest Egg from Cracking”). [i] To be conservative, the cost of the put protection was calculated using the ask price of the puts. In practice, an investor can often buy puts for less than the ask price (i.e., at some price between the bid and ask). So, in practice, an investor would likely have paid less than $2,880 for this hedge. A similarly conservative approach was used for calculating the costs of all of the hedges in this portfolio (with the cost of puts calculated at the ask and the income from calls calculated at the bid). Disclosure: I/we have no positions in any stocks mentioned, and no plans to initiate any positions within the next 72 hours. (More…) I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.

Keeping A Small Nest Egg From Cracking

Summary A small investor can protect himself against a severe correction while maximizing his expected return by using a hedged portfolio, such as the one shown below. This portfolio has a negative hedging cost, meaning the investor would effectively be getting paid to hedge. This portfolio is designed for an investor who is willing to risk a maximum decline of up to 20%. Investors with lower risk tolerances can use a similar process, though their expected returns would generally be lower. Seeking Direction as Investor Concerns Mount As Seeking Alpha contributor Eric Parnell, CFA noted , (“Stocks: Perspectives On The Selloff”), the four-day decline in the S&P 500 index last week was the worst since October of 2011. The stock market slide coincided with fresh indicators of global economic weakness, including oil futures dropping below $40 per barrel on Friday. On Sunday night New York time, and Monday morning in Shanghai, the Shanghai Composit Index opened down sharply. CNBC aired a rare live Sunday evening broadcast (” Markets in Turmoil “) in response to the negative market news. During the broadcast, analysts and anchors debated whether the pullback would continue, and how investors should respond. I didn’t watch the entire broadcast, but the part I saw conformed to previous, similar specials: a guest expert says the pullback could be a buying opportunity, reiterates the importance of having a long term horizon, etc. In reality, no one knows what the future holds, but small investors can strictly limit their risk while remaining invested in the stock market. Another Way To Invest Small investors don’t have to live with worry that they might suffer an intolerable loss in the stock market. With a hedged portfolio, they can decide the maximum drawdown they are willing to risk, and invest confident that their downside risk is strictly limited in accordance with that. In the example below, we’ll show a sample hedged portfolio designed to protect a small investor against a greater-than-20% loss over the next six months while maximizing his expected return. We’ll also detail how an investor can build a hedged portfolio himself. The first decision an investor needs to make, though, is how much he is willing to risk. Risk Tolerance, Hedging Cost, and Potential Return All else equal, with a hedged portfolio, the greater an investor’s risk tolerance — the greater the maximum drawdown he is willing to risk (his “threshold”) — the lower his hedging cost will be and the higher his expected return will be. An investor who is willing to risk a 20% drawdown is in good company. Several years ago, in one of his market commentaries , portfolio manager John Hussman had this to say about 20% drawdowns: “An intolerable loss, in my view, is one that requires a heroic recovery simply to break even… a short-term loss of 20%, particularly after the market has become severely depressed, should not be at all intolerable to long-term investors because such losses are generally reversed in the first few months of an advance (or even a powerful bear market rally).” Essentially, 20% is a large enough threshold that it can reduce the cost of hedging, but not so large that it precludes a recovery. Constructing A Hedged Portfolio In a previous article (“Backtesting The Hedged Portfolio Method”), we discussed a process investors could use to construct a hedged portfolio designed to maximize expected return while limiting risk. We’ll recap that process here briefly, and then explain how you can implement it yourself. Finally, we’ll present an example of a hedged portfolio that was constructed this way with Portfolio Armor ‘s automated tool. The process, in broad strokes, is this: Find securities with high potential returns (we define potential return as a high-end, bullish estimate of how the security will perform). Find securities that are relatively inexpensive to hedge. Buy a handful of securities that score well on the first two criteria; in other words, buy a handful of securities with high potential returns net of their hedging costs (or, ones with high net potential returns). Hedge them. The potential benefits of this approach are twofold: · If you are successful at the first step (finding securities with high potential returns), and you hold a concentrated portfolio of them, your portfolios should generate decent returns over time. · If you are hedged, and your return estimates are completely wrong, on occasion — or the market moves against you — your downside will be strictly limited. How to Implement This Approach · Finding securities with high potential returns. For this, you can use Seeking Alpha Pro , among other sources. Seeking Alpha articles often include price targets for long ideas, and you can convert these to percentage returns from current prices. But you’ll need to use the same time frame for each of your expected return calculations to facilitate comparisons of expected returns, hedging costs, and net expected returns. Our method starts with calculations of six-month potential returns. · Finding securities that are relatively inexpensive to hedge. For this step, you’ll need to find hedges for the securities with high potential returns, and then calculate the hedging cost as a percentage of position value for each security. Whatever hedging method you use, for this example, you’d want to make sure that each security is hedged against a greater-than-20% decline over the time frame covered by your potential return calculations. Our method attempts to find optimal static hedges using collars as well as protective puts. · Buying securities that score well on the first two criteria. In order to determine which securities these are, you may need to first adjust your potential return calculations by the time frame of your hedges. For example, although our method initially calculates six-month potential returns and aims to find hedges with six months to expiration, in some cases the closest hedge expiration may be five months out. In those cases, we will adjust our potential return calculation down accordingly, because we expect an investor will exit the position shortly before the hedge expires (in general, our method and calculations are based on the assumption that an investor will hold his shares for six months, until shortly before their hedges expire or until they are called away, whichever comes first). Next, you’ll need to subtract the hedging costs you calculated in the previous step from the potential returns you calculated for each position, and sort the securities by their potential returns net of hedging costs, or net potential returns. The securities that come to the top of that sort are the ones you’ll want to consider for your portfolio. · Fine-tuning portfolio construction . You’ll want to stick with round lots (numbers of shares divisible by 100) to minimize hedging costs, so if you’re going to include a handful of securities from the sort in the previous step and you have a relatively small portfolio, you’ll need to take into account the share prices of the securities. Stocks such as Priceline.com (NASDAQ: PCLN ), trading at more than $1200 per share, wouldn’t work in a $30,000 hedged portfolio, because the investor wouldn’t be able to purchase one round lot. Another fine-tuning step is to minimize cash that’s leftover after you make your initial allocation to round lots of securities and their respective hedges. Because each security is hedged, you won’t need a large cash position to reduce risk. And since returns on cash are so low now, by minimizing cash you can potentially boost returns. In this step, our method searches for what we call a “cash substitute”: that’s a security collared with a tight cap (1% or the current yield on a leading money market fund, whichever is higher) in an attempt to capture a better-than-cash return while keeping the investor’s downside limited according to his specifications. You could use a similar approach, or you could simply allocate leftover cash to one of the securities you selected in the previous step. · Calculating An Expected Return. While net potential returns are bullish estimates of how well securities will perform, net of their hedging costs, expected returns, in our terminology, are the more likely returns net of hedging costs. In a series of 25,412 backtests over an 11 year time period, we determined two things about our method of calculating potential returns: it generates alpha, and it overstates actual returns. The average actual return over the next six months in those 25,412 tests was 0.3x the average potential return calculated ahead of time. So, we use that empirically derived relationship to calculate our expected returns. Example Hedged Portfolio Here is an example of a hedged portfolio created using the general process described above by the automated portfolio construction tool at Portfolio Armor. This portfolio was generated as of Friday’s close (results could vary at different times, depending on market conditions), and used as its inputs the parameters we mentioned for our hypothetical investor above: a $30,000 to invest, and a goal of maximizing potential return while limiting downside risk, in the worst-case scenario, to a drawdown of no more than 20%. Worst Case Scenario The “Max Drawdown” column in the portfolio level summary shows the worst case scenario for this hedged portfolio. If every security in it went to zero before the hedges expired, the portfolio would decline 18.67%. Negative Hedging Cost Although minimizing hedging cost was only the secondary goal here after maximizing potential return, note that, in this case, the total hedging cost for the portfolio was negative, -1.23%, meaning the investor would receive more income in total from selling the call legs of the collars on his positions than he spent buying the put legs. Best Case Scenario At the portfolio level, the net potential return is 17.79%. This represents the best case scenario, if each underlying security in the portfolio meets or exceeds its potential return. A More Likely Scenario The portfolio level expected return of 6.86% represents a more likely scenario, based on the historical relationship between our calculated potential returns and actual returns. Each Security Is Hedged Note that in the portfolio above, each of the three underlying securities – Netflix (NASDAQ: NFLX ), Facebook (NASDAQ: FB ), and DexCom (NASDAQ: DXCM ) is hedged. Hedging each security according to the investor’s risk tolerance obviates the need for broad diversification, and lets him concentrate his assets in a handful of securities with high potential returns net of their hedging costs. Here’s a closer look at the hedge for one of these positions, Netflix: As you can see in first part of the image above, NFLX is hedged with an optimal collar with its cap set at 21.92%. Using an analysis of historical returns as well as option market sentiment, the tool calculated a potential return of 21.92% for NFLX over the next six months. That’s why 21.92% is used as the cap here: the idea is to capture the potential return while offsetting the cost of hedging by selling other investors the right to buy NFLX if it appreciates beyond that over the next six months.[i] The cost of the put leg of this collar was $820, or 7.89% of position value, but, as you can see in the image below, the income from the short call leg was $770, or 7.41% as percentage of position value. Since the income from the call leg offset most of the cost of the put leg, the net cost of the optimal collar on NFLX was $50, or 0.48% of position value.[ii] Note that, although the cost of the hedge on this position was positive, the hedging cost of this portfolio as a whole was negative . Why These Particular Securities? Netflix and DexCom shares were included as primary securities in this portfolio because, as of Friday’s close, they were both among the top securities in Portfolio Armor’s universe when ranked by net potential return, and they had lower share prices than other securities similarly highly ranked. Recall from our discussion above about fine-tuning portfolio construction, that it can be difficult to fit round lots of securities with higher share prices in smaller portfolios. Facebook was included as a cash substitute because it had one of the highest net potential returns when hedged as a cash substitute. Possibly More Protection Than Promised In some cases, hedges such as the ones in the portfolio above can provide more protection than promised. For an example of that, see this post on hedging Netflix last year. Hedged Portfolios For Investors With Lower Risk Tolerance The hedged portfolio shown above was designed for a small investor who could tolerate a decline of as much as 20% over the next six months, but the same process can be used for investors who are more risk averse. Using data as of Friday’s close, we were also able to construct a hedged portfolio for an investor only willing to tolerate a loss of a tenth as much, 2% over the next six months. —————————————————————————– [i] This hedge actually expires in a little more than 7 months, but the expected returns are based on the assumption that an investor will hold his positions for six months, until they are called away or until shortly before their hedges expire, whichever comes first. [ii] To be conservative, the net cost of the collar was calculated using the bid price of the calls and the ask price of the puts. In practice, an investor can often sell the calls for a higher price (some price between the bid and ask) and he can often buy the puts for less than the ask price (again, at some price between the bid and ask). So, in practice, the cost of this collar would likely have been lower. Disclosure: I/we have no positions in any stocks mentioned, and no plans to initiate any positions within the next 72 hours. (More…) I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.