The Greatest Scourge in Factorland: Revaluation Alpha = Fake Alpha (JPM Series)

Key Points

  • Alpha is not merely a simple risk-adjusted return difference; rather, it is the sum of several critical components, including revaluation alpha, structural alpha, and noise.

  • When introducing a new factor or strategy, few take the time to test whether its historical success stemmed from upward or downward revaluation alpha.

  • Over a 98-year period, U.S. stocks delivered an average annual excess return of 4.5% over long bonds, with revaluation alpha accounting for one-third of that excess return.

  • Past returns contain both structural alpha and a likely one-time revaluation alpha; however, the sum of the two is not a reliable method for anticipating future structural alpha.

Introduction

We are all familiar with this SEC-required warning that “past performance does not predict future performance.” And yet we are relentlessly tempted to believe otherwise, that a thoughtful deep dive into past returns can give us information that may portend future returns. The efficient markets crowd would say that this is rubbish. However, ample empirical evidence suggests otherwise, and entire academic, consulting, and publishing industries in finance earn countless billions every year based on the assumption that past performance can predict results.

What aspects of past returns are (at least modestly) predictive of future returns, what aspects are perverse predictors, and what aspects are pure noise?

The investment industry traditionally approaches alpha as a simple risk-adjusted return difference (though many practitioners misuse the term “alpha” by forgoing the risk adjustment). In reality, alpha has multiple dimensions. At a minimum, historical measures of alpha consist of three constituent parts: structural alpha, revaluation alpha, and noise. If our goal is to find structural alpha—alpha that may be a reliable future source of return—then we should attempt to measure these constituent parts, so that we are not deceiving ourselves and our clients.