Predicting Risk: Not Easy, But Easier Relative To Return

 | Jan 06, 2022 04:00PM ET

Forecasting is a necessary evil in investing. The very act of investing is an exercise in making assumption about future events. If you didn’t expect to book a profit, presumably you wouldn’t make the trade. The trouble starts when you move beyond this basic axiom and start making decisions about how to forecast, what to forecast and over what time frame. But none of this changes the basic truism that risk is easier to forecast than return. There are caveats, of course, but even small relative advantages can be useful at times.

Yes, the details matter—a lot. For starters, risk comes in a rainbow of colors, and so your preference for defining risk will cast a long shadow over your success (or not) in forecasting it. There are also limits related to how far ahead you can model risk. But beggars can’t be choosy, and so we must use whatever edges the financial gods have given us.

But enough with generalizations. Let’s get specific. As a simple example, consider return volatility, a common if less-than-perfect proxy for risk. To be precise, let’s forecast the day-ahead return volatility for the stock market (S&P 500 Index) using a naïve model that simply uses the previous data point as the ex-ante estimate. As the chart below indicates, this is a surprisingly reliable model. Indeed, the correlation between the current day’s risk and its one-day-ahead forecast is a bit more than 0.99, or just shy of perfect correlation, i.e., 1.0.