Can commodities dominate stock and bond portfolios?

In this article we discuss whether commodities should be included as an asset class when establishing portfolios. By investigating second order stochastic dominance relations, we find that the stock and bond indices tend to dominate the individual commodities. We further study if we can find a combi...

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Hauptverfasser: Henriksen, Tom Erik Sønsteng, Pichler, Alois, Westgaard, Sjur, Frydenberg, Stein
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Pichler, Alois
Westgaard, Sjur
Frydenberg, Stein
description In this article we discuss whether commodities should be included as an asset class when establishing portfolios. By investigating second order stochastic dominance relations, we find that the stock and bond indices tend to dominate the individual commodities. We further study if we can find a combination of stocks, bonds and commodities that dominate others. Compared to a 60% stock and 40% bond portfolio mix, portfolios consisting of long positions in gold futures and two different actively managed indices are the only commodity investments to be included as long positions in a stock/bond portfolio. The results should be of interest for fund managers and traders that seek to improve their risk-return trade off compared to the traditional 60/40 portfolio.
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title Can commodities dominate stock and bond portfolios?
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