This study builds on the findings in Krawczyk (2008), where a 'cautious relaxed' utility measure is introduced in the solving of a dynamic portfolio management problem. The new measure provides distributions that are left skewed in contrast to the right skewed distributions previously found. This paper builds on these findings by testing the effect of increasing the client's target and introducing the manager's preferences. It is found that increasing the target causes the distribution to become less left skewed, causing higher probabilities of loss. The pension fund manager considering his own payoff does not significantly affect the results and in some cases improves them
International audienceThis paper studies, in a unified and dynamic framework, the impact of fund man...
The paper studies the optimal asset allocation problem of a defined benefit pension plan that operat...
>Magister Scientiae - MScThe industry of pension funds has become one of the drivers of today’s econ...
This study builds on the findings in Krawczyk (2008), where a 'cautious relaxed' utility measure is ...
This study builds on recent findings that target-based utility measures, used in the dynamic portfol...
Assuming loss aversion, stochastic investment and labour income processes, and a path-dependent targ...
For pension-savers, a low payoff is a financial disaster. Such investors will most likely prefer lef...
Abstract: Pension Trustees are constrained in their asset class weightings by the reluctance of pen...
This paper presents a dynamic model of a public pension fund’s choice of portfolio risk. Optimal por...
The low interest rates that prevail on many capital markets impose great challenges for the asset ma...
The purpose of this paper is to propose an innovative method of evaluating the performance of active...
This article investigates a fund manager's risk-taking incentives induced by an increasing and conve...
In this paper, we incorporate regret into the decision-making process of a pension fund and derive t...
Money managers are rewarded for increasing the value of assets under management, and predominantly s...
One of the most important consequences of the Chilean pension reform undertaken in the early 1980s w...
International audienceThis paper studies, in a unified and dynamic framework, the impact of fund man...
The paper studies the optimal asset allocation problem of a defined benefit pension plan that operat...
>Magister Scientiae - MScThe industry of pension funds has become one of the drivers of today’s econ...
This study builds on the findings in Krawczyk (2008), where a 'cautious relaxed' utility measure is ...
This study builds on recent findings that target-based utility measures, used in the dynamic portfol...
Assuming loss aversion, stochastic investment and labour income processes, and a path-dependent targ...
For pension-savers, a low payoff is a financial disaster. Such investors will most likely prefer lef...
Abstract: Pension Trustees are constrained in their asset class weightings by the reluctance of pen...
This paper presents a dynamic model of a public pension fund’s choice of portfolio risk. Optimal por...
The low interest rates that prevail on many capital markets impose great challenges for the asset ma...
The purpose of this paper is to propose an innovative method of evaluating the performance of active...
This article investigates a fund manager's risk-taking incentives induced by an increasing and conve...
In this paper, we incorporate regret into the decision-making process of a pension fund and derive t...
Money managers are rewarded for increasing the value of assets under management, and predominantly s...
One of the most important consequences of the Chilean pension reform undertaken in the early 1980s w...
International audienceThis paper studies, in a unified and dynamic framework, the impact of fund man...
The paper studies the optimal asset allocation problem of a defined benefit pension plan that operat...
>Magister Scientiae - MScThe industry of pension funds has become one of the drivers of today’s econ...