Common Operations on the Portfolio Object
Naming a Portfolio Object
To name a Portfolio
object, use the Name
property.
Name
is informational and has no effect on any portfolio
calculations. If the Name
property is nonempty,
Name
is the title for the efficient frontier plot generated
by plotFrontier
. For example, if you
set up an asset allocation fund, you could name the Portfolio
object Asset Allocation
Fund:
p = Portfolio('Name','Asset Allocation Fund'); disp(p.Name)
Asset Allocation Fund
Configuring the Assets in the Asset Universe
The fundamental quantity in the Portfolio
object is the number of assets in
the asset universe. This quantity is maintained in the NumAssets
property. Although you can set this property directly, it is derived from other
properties such as the mean of asset returns and the initial portfolio. In some
instances, the number of assets may need to be set directly. This example shows how
to set up a Portfolio
object that has four
assets:
p = Portfolio('NumAssets', 4);
disp(p.NumAssets)
4
After setting the NumAssets
property, you cannot modify it (unless no other
properties are set that depend on NumAssets
). The only way to
change the number of assets in an existing Portfolio
object with
a known number of assets is to create a new Portfolio object.
Setting Up a List of Asset Identifiers
When working with portfolios, you must specify a universe of
assets. Although you can perform a complete analysis without naming
the assets in your universe, it is helpful to have an identifier associated
with each asset as you create and work with portfolios. You can create
a list of asset identifiers as a cell vector of character vectors
in the property AssetList
. You can set up the list
using the next two functions.
Setting Up Asset Lists Using the Portfolio Function
Suppose that you have a Portfolio
object, p
, with assets
with symbols 'AA'
', 'BA'
,
'CAT'
, 'DD'
, and
'ETR'
. You can create a list of these asset symbols in
the object using the Portfolio
object:
p = Portfolio('assetlist', { 'AA', 'BA', 'CAT', 'DD', 'ETR' }); disp(p.AssetList)
'AA' 'BA' 'CAT' 'DD' 'ETR'
AssetList
is maintained as a cell array
that contains character vectors, and that it is necessary to pass a cell array
into the Portfolio
object to set
AssetList
. In addition, notice that the property
NumAssets
is set to 5
based on the
number of symbols used to create the asset
list:disp(p.NumAssets)
5
Setting Up Asset Lists Using the setAssetList Function
You can also specify a list of assets using the setAssetList
function. Given
the list of asset symbols 'AA'
, 'BA'
,
'CAT'
, 'DD'
,
and'ETR'
, you can use setAssetList
with:
p = Portfolio; p = setAssetList(p, { 'AA', 'BA', 'CAT', 'DD', 'ETR' }); disp(p.AssetList)
'AA' 'BA' 'CAT' 'DD' 'ETR'
setAssetList
also enables you to enter symbols directly as a
comma-separated list without creating a cell array of character vectors. For
example, given the list of assets symbols 'AA'
,
'BA'
, 'CAT'
, 'DD'
,
and 'ETR'
, use setAssetList
:
p = Portfolio; p = setAssetList(p,'AA', 'BA', 'CAT', 'DD', 'ETR'); disp(p.AssetList)
'AA' 'BA' 'CAT' 'DD' 'ETR'
setAssetList
has many additional features to create lists of
asset identifiers. If you use setAssetList
with just a
Portfolio
object, it creates a default asset list
according to the name specified in the hidden public property
defaultforAssetList
(which is 'Asset'
by default). The number of asset names created depends on the number of assets
in the property NumAssets
. If NumAssets
is
not set, then NumAssets
is assumed to be
1
.
For example, if a Portfolio
object p
is created with
NumAssets
= 5
, then this code fragment
shows the default naming
behavior:
p = Portfolio('numassets',5);
p = setAssetList(p);
disp(p.AssetList)
'Asset1' 'Asset2' 'Asset3' 'Asset4' 'Asset5'
defaultforAssetList
to 'ETF'
, you can
then create a default list for
ETFs:p = Portfolio('numassets',5); p.defaultforAssetList = 'ETF'; p = setAssetList(p); disp(p.AssetList)
'ETF1' 'ETF2' 'ETF3' 'ETF4' 'ETF5'
Truncating and Padding Asset Lists
If the NumAssets
property is already set and you pass in too many or too
few identifiers, the Portfolio
object, and the setAssetList
function truncate or
pad the list with numbered default asset names that use the name specified in the
hidden public property defaultforAssetList
. If the list is
truncated or padded, a warning message indicates the discrepancy. For example,
assume that you have a Portfolio
object with five ETFs and you
only know the first three CUSIPs '921937835'
,
'922908769'
, and '922042775'
. Use this
syntax to create an asset list that pads the remaining asset identifiers with
numbered 'UnknownCUSIP'
placeholders:
p = Portfolio('numassets',5); p.defaultforAssetList = 'UnknownCUSIP'; p = setAssetList(p,'921937835', '922908769', '922042775'); disp(p.AssetList)
Warning: Input list of assets has 2 too few identifiers. Padding with numbered assets. > In Portfolio.setAssetList at 121 '921937835' '922908769' '922042775' 'UnknownCUSIP4' 'UnknownCUSIP5'
Alternatively, suppose that you have too many identifiers and need only the first four assets.
This example illustrates truncation of the asset list using the Portfolio
object:
p = Portfolio('numassets',4); p = Portfolio(p, 'assetlist', { 'AGG', 'EEM', 'MDY', 'SPY', 'VEU' }); disp(p.AssetList)
Warning: AssetList has 1 too many identifiers. Using first 4 assets. > In Portfolio.checkarguments at 434 In Portfolio.Portfolio>Portfolio.Portfolio at 171 'AGG' 'EEM' 'MDY' 'SPY'
The hidden public property uppercaseAssetList
is a Boolean flag to specify
whether to convert asset names to uppercase letters. The default value for
uppercaseAssetList
is false
. This example
shows how to use the uppercaseAssetList
flag to force identifiers
to be uppercase
letters:
p = Portfolio; p.uppercaseAssetList = true; p = setAssetList(p,{ 'aa', 'ba', 'cat', 'dd', 'etr' }); disp(p.AssetList)
'AA' 'BA' 'CAT' 'DD' 'ETR'
See Also
Portfolio
| setAssetList
| setInitPort
| setTrackingPort
| estimateBounds
| checkFeasibility
Related Examples
- Setting Up an Initial or Current Portfolio
- Working with Portfolio Constraints Using Defaults
- Asset Returns and Moments of Asset Returns Using Portfolio Object
- Validate the Portfolio Problem for Portfolio Object
- Asset Allocation Case Study
- Portfolio Optimization Examples Using Financial Toolbox
- Portfolio Optimization with Semicontinuous and Cardinality Constraints
- Black-Litterman Portfolio Optimization Using Financial Toolbox
- Portfolio Optimization Using Factor Models
- Portfolio Optimization Using Social Performance Measure
- Diversify Portfolios Using Custom Objective