|
The Best Of Both Worlds: How To Protect Your
Financial Assets And Earn Higher Returns
It is possible both to protect the value of your financial assets
against downside risk and to earn higher average returns than you
would on bank and building society deposits. The secret is portfolio
insurance. That is the conclusion of David Blake of Birkbeck College,
London, writing in the September 1996 issue of the Economic Journal.
He argues that people would have to pay far less than they are actually
prepared to in order to insure their portfolios. Unfortunately,
no financial institutions are providing such insurance policies,
a huge gap in the retail financial services market.
Blake notes that most individuals have an aversion to risk, that
is, they are generally much more concerned about the value of their
wealth falling than with it rising. As a result, they typically
invest the bulk of their financial wealth in safe assets, such as
bank and building society deposits, which retain their capital values
over time. But while these deposits are safe, the returns on them
are not very exciting, especially when market interest rates are
as low as they are at the moment.
However, it is possible to have the best of both worlds and invest
in assets with much higher returns on average than deposits, and
at the same time protect against the downside risk associated with
these assets. The secret is portfolio insurance: you invest in a
portfolio of risky assets and at the same time take out an insurance
policy to protect against the downside risk. If at the end of the
year, the value of your portfolio of financial assets is below the
value at the start of the year, the insurance pays you the difference.
Blakes analysis of recent evidence from the Financial Research
Survey clearly shows that people are highly risk averse in the UK.
Very poor investors, the 25% of the population with financial assets
worth between £50 and £450, would be prepared to pay
an insurance premium of about 3% of their total wealth to avoid
a fall in the value of their assets.
In contrast, very rich investors, the 1% of the population with
financial assets above £36,800, would be prepared to pay more
than 6% of their wealth to avoid a fall in the value of their assets.
This is because rich investors hold a much larger proportion of
their wealth in risky securities, such as shares and bonds, and
so would be willing to pay a larger premium to insure their portfolios.
But the good news, according to Blakes analysis, is that
neither group of investors, rich or poor, would have to pay anywhere
near as much as this to take out portfolio insurance. Blake shows
that in a competitive market for portfolio insurance, very poor
investors would have to pay a tiny 0.1% to insure their portfolios.
This is because poor investors hold nearly 90% of their financial
assets in safe deposits, and only 10% in riskier shares and bonds.
And rich investors, who hold 70% of their financial assets in shares
and bonds and only 30% in deposits, would have to pay a portfolio
insurance premium of less than 3% of their total wealth. Even after
paying these premiums, investors would still end up getting much
higher assured returns than if they put all their money on deposit.
So much for the good news. What about the bad news? The bad news
is that there are no financial institutions around at the moment
who are providing portfolio insurance. Blake has identified a big
gap in the retail financial services market. Someone should come
along and fill it!
ENDS
Note for Editors: Efficiency, Risk Aversion and Portfolio
Insurance: An Analysis of Financial Asset Portfolios Held by Investors
in the United Kingdom by David Blake is published in the September
1996 issue of Economic Journal. Blake is Barclays Bank Reader in
Financial Economics and Director of the Pensions Institute at Birkbeck
College, University of London.
For Further Information: contact David Blake on 0171-631-6410 (fax:
0171-631-6416; email: dblake@econ.bbk.ac.uk); or RES/ESRC Media
Consultant for Economics Romesh Vaitilingam on 0171-878-2919 or
mobile 0468-661095.
|