Im starting some research into risk management tools and was wondering if there was any alternative/complimentary tools to VAR as a portfolio risk management tool.
Quote from maninjapan:
Im starting some research into risk management tools and was wondering if there was any alternative/complimentary tools to VAR as a portfolio risk management tool.

Quote from maninjapan:
Im by no means well versed in any of these tools, so please correct me if I am way off track here, but from my limited knowledge VAR would be greater as volatility increases. But what about if you were running a strategy that took advantage of volatility spikes where most of your activity would take place place just after a spike in volatility, it just seems to me that your VaR would be distorted by this spike in volatility, which would in turn be overstating your total risk. Now I understand that any measure of risk is going to have its limitations but I was just wondering if there was a more accurate measure of risk in a situation like this. Hope this makes at least some sense.....
Quote from sjfan:
Assuming you are using a variance/covariance style VaR method, VaR is completely inappropriate to measure the risk of a dynamic strategy that rebalances to vol. Unless you are trying to measure very short term VaR (day or shorter) as a proxy for gap risk.
If your strategy is algorithmic, it might be possible to compute VaR using a monte carlo simulations method; otherwise, I might try returns decomposition as a first attempt.
Quote from maninjapan:
Thanks sjfan, I think thats exactly the kind of response I am after. (its completely over my head at the moment though). What if we were using options as opposed to linear products? Would that affect things at all?