10.4225/03/593768f32b133
Campbell, Rachel
Rachel
Campbell
Forbes, Catherine S.
Catherine S.
Forbes
Koedijk, Kees
Kees
Koedijk
Kofman, Paul
Paul
Kofman
Diversification Meltdown or the Impact of Fat Tails on Conditional Correlation?
Monash University
2017
monash:2336
1959.1/2336
Truncated correlation
Conditional correlation
2003
Bivariate Student-t correlation
2017-06-07 02:46:09
Journal contribution
https://bridges.monash.edu/articles/journal_contribution/Diversification_Meltdown_or_the_Impact_of_Fat_Tails_on_Conditional_Correlation_/5084764
A perceived increase in correlation during turbulent market conditions implies a reduction in the benefits arising from portfolio diversification. Unfortunately, it is exactly then that these benefits are most needed. To determine whether diversification truly breaks down, we investigate the robustness of a popular conditional correlation estimator against alternative distributional assumptions. Analytical results show that the apparent meltdown in diversification could be a result of assuming normally distributed returns. A more realistic assumption - the bivariate Student-t distribution - suggests that there is little empirical support for diversification meltdown.