Utility Function Approach to Portfolio Selection Problem

2021 ◽  
pp. 958-972
Author(s):  
Anna Andreevna Malakhova ◽  
Elena Nikolaevna Sochneva ◽  
Svetlana Anatolyevna Yarkova ◽  
Albina Sergeevna Danilova ◽  
Elena Anatolyevna Yurieva ◽  
...  
Author(s):  
KAI YAO ◽  
XIAOYU JI

In the traditional decision theory, choice with undetermined consequence is usually regarded as random variable, which usually describes objective uncertainty. This paper first considers the human uncertainty in making decisions, and employs uncertain variable to describe the choice. Utility function is also employed in the paper, and expected utility is introduced as a criterion to rank the choices. At last, in order to illustrate the uncertain decision making method, a portfolio selection problem is considered.


2004 ◽  
Vol 09 (01) ◽  
Author(s):  
Teresa León ◽  
Vicente Liern ◽  
Paulina Marco ◽  
Enriqueta Vercher ◽  
José Vicente Segura

Author(s):  
Xin Huang ◽  
Duan Li

Traditional modeling on the mean-variance portfolio selection often assumes a full knowledge on statistics of assets' returns. It is, however, not always the case in real financial markets. This paper deals with an ambiguous mean-variance portfolio selection problem with a mixture model on the returns of risky assets, where the proportions of different component distributions are assumed to be unknown to the investor, but being constants (in any time instant). Taking into consideration the updates of proportions from future observations is essential to find an optimal policy with active learning feature, but makes the problem intractable when we adopt the classical methods. Using reinforcement learning, we derive an investment policy with a learning feature in a two-level framework. In the lower level, the time-decomposed approach (dynamic programming) is adopted to solve a family of scenario subcases where in each case the series of component distributions along multiple time periods is specified. At the upper level, a scenario-decomposed approach (progressive hedging algorithm) is applied in order to iteratively aggregate the scenario solutions from the lower layer based on the current knowledge on proportions, and this two-level solution framework is repeated in a manner of rolling horizon. We carry out experimental studies to illustrate the execution of our policy scheme.


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