Risk Management & Trading Psychology
Position sizing, risk metrics, and trader behaviour. 10 indexed terms, 7 additional definitions.
Key Concepts
The CTA convexity profile describes the characteristic nonlinear return pattern of trend-following managed futures funds, which tend to lose small amounts during range-bound markets but generate outsized gains during sustained directional trends. This convexity makes CTAs a structurally valuable hedge against tail events in traditional long-only portfolios.
Earnings-at-Risk (EaR) quantifies the maximum adverse impact on a firm's net income or EBITDA over a defined horizon at a specified confidence level due to movements in market risk factors such as interest rates, commodity prices, or exchange rates, serving as the income-statement analog to Value-at-Risk.
An endogenous risk spiral occurs when market participants' collective risk-management responses to falling asset prices and rising volatility amplify the very stress they are designed to mitigate, creating a self-reinforcing loop of deleveraging, spread widening, and liquidity withdrawal. Unlike exogenous shocks, endogenous risk spirals are generated from within the financial system itself.
The Gross Leverage Ratio measures a fund's total long plus short market exposure as a multiple of its net asset value, serving as a key indicator of a portfolio's aggregate risk appetite and forced-selling vulnerability during market dislocations.
Liquidity-adjusted beta measures an asset's sensitivity to market returns after explicitly accounting for the cost and variability of its liquidity, capturing the additional systematic risk that arises when assets become difficult to trade precisely when broad market drawdowns force liquidation.
Liquidity-Adjusted Value at Risk (LVaR) extends the standard VaR framework by incorporating the additional market impact and bid-ask slippage cost of unwinding a position over its realistic liquidation horizon, producing materially larger loss estimates for illiquid positions than conventional VaR.
A macro tourist is a market participant, typically a generalist fund manager or retail speculator, who temporarily enters macro trades without deep structural conviction, creating positioning distortions that experienced macro traders can exploit.
The NAV Liquidity Discount is the markdown applied to the stated net asset value of a fund or portfolio to reflect the cost and risk of liquidating illiquid positions under stressed conditions. Professional allocators and risk managers use it to price redemption risk and stress-test fund stability.
The risk of rare, extreme outcomes that fall in the "tail" of a probability distribution, far from the average. Tail events occur more frequently than standard models predict because financial returns have "fat tails" compared to a normal distribution.
A widow maker trade refers to a position that is theoretically sound but persistently causes catastrophic losses due to timing, structural distortions, or central bank intervention, most famously applied to shorting Japanese Government Bonds.
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