How To Combine A Billion Alphas
Quantigic Solutions LLC; Free University of Tbilisi
Centre for Computational Biology, Duke-NUS Medical School
February 27, 2016
Abstract:
We give an explicit algorithm and source code for computing optimal weights for combining a large number N of alphas. This algorithm does not cost O(N^3) or even O(N^2) operations but is much cheaper, in fact, the number of required operations scales linearly with N. We discuss how in the absence of binary or quasi-binary “clustering” of alphas, which is not observed in practice, the optimization problem simplifies when N is large. Our algorithm does not require computing principal components or inverting large matrices, nor does it require iterations. The number of risk factors it employs, which typically is limited by the number of historical observations, can be sizably enlarged via using position data for the underlying tradables.
How To Combine A Billion Alphas – Introduction
Now that machines have taken over alpha mining, the number of available alphas is growing exponentially. On the flip side, these “modern” alphas are ever fainter and more ephemeral. To mitigate this effect, among other things, one combines a large number of alphas and trades the so-combined “mega-alpha”. And this is nontrivial.
Why? It is important to pick the alpha weights optimally, i.e., to optimize the return, Sharpe ratio and/or other performance characteristics of this alpha portfolio. The commonly used techniques in optimizing alphas are conceptually similar to the mean-variance portfolio optimization [Markowitz, 1952] or Sharpe ratio maximization [Sharpe, 1994] for stock portfolios. However, there are some evident differences. The most prosaic difference is that the number of alphas can be huge, in hundreds of thousands, millions or even billions. The available history (lookback), however, naturally is much shorter. This has implications for determining the alpha weights.
Let us look at vanilla Sharpe ratio maximization of the alpha portfolio with weights , where N is the number of alphas. The optimal weights are given by
where are the expected returns for our alphas, is the inverse of the alpha return covariance matrix , and is the normalization coefficient such that
If we compute as a sample covariance matrix based on a time series of realized returns (see (3)), it is badly singular as the number of observations is much smaller than N. This also happens in the case of stock portfolios. In that case one either builds a proprietary risk model to replace or opts for a commercially available (multifactor) risk model. In the case of alphas the latter option is simply not there.
So, what is one to do? We can try to build a risk model for alphas following a rich experience with risk models for stocks. In the case of stocks a more popular approach is to combine style risk factors (i.e., those based on measured or estimated properties of stocks, such as size, volatility, value, etc.) and industry risk factors (i.e., those based on stocks’ membership in sectors, industries, sub-industries, etc., depending on the nomenclature used by a particular industry classification employed). The number of style factors is limited, of order 10 for longer-horizon models, and about 4 for shorter-horizon models. In the case of stocks, at least for shorter-horizon models, it is the ubiquitous industry risk factors (numbering in a few hundred for a typical liquid trading universe) that add most value. However, there is no analog of the (binary or quasi-binary) industry classification for alphas. In practice, for many alphas it is not even known how they are constructed, only the (historical and desired) positions are known. Even formulaic alphas [Kakushadze, Lauprete and Tulchinsky, 2015] are mostly so convoluted that realistically it is impossible to classify them in any meaningful way, at least not such that the number of the resulting (binary or quasi-binary) “clusters” would be numerous enough to compete with principal components (see below). And there are only a few a priori relevant style factors for alphas [Kakushadze, 2014] to compete with the principal components.
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