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A Note on the Leverage Effect on Portfolio Performance Measures

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 April 2009

Extract

In a recent article, Modigliani and Pogue [2] raised the issue of “leverage bias” in portfolio performance measures. Specifically, they contended that the value of the Jensen's alpha (α) could be affected by borrowing or lending at the risk-free rate, while the Treynor index (TI) does not suffer from this shortcoming. They illustrated this effect through the use of a graphical example similar to the one in Exhibit I where A and B are two unlevered portfolios with the same α's but different TI's. Modigliani and Pogue argued that by leveraging, i.e., borrowing at Rf, the portfolio with the greater slope (TI), A, could attain a levered portfolio AL which clearly dominates portfolio B. In other L words, the line with the higher TI will dominate the line with a lower TI regardless of α values. This seems to imply that, in general, TI is a better measure of ex post portfolio performance, and that ranking based on TI's is consistent and invariant to the leverage effect, while ranking based on a's is not.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © School of Business Administration, University of Washington 1978

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References

REFRENCES

“1]Jensen, Michael C.The Performance of Mutual Funds in the Period 1945–1964”. Journal of Finance (05 1968), pp. 389416.Google Scholar
[2]Modigliani, Franco, and Pogue, Gerald. “An Introduction to Risk and Return: Concepts and Evidence, Part II”. Financial Analyst Journal (06 1974), pp. 6986.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
[3]Modigliani, Franco, and Pogue, Gerald. A Study of Investment Performance Fees. Heath-Lexington Books (1974), Chapter II.Google Scholar
[4]Treynor, Jack L. “How to Rate the Management of Investment Funds”. Harvard Business Review (02 1965), pp. 6375.Google Scholar