Portfolio Inputs
Portfolio Risk Summary
Component VaR Breakdown
| Asset | Component VaR | % of Total | Budget | Utilization |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Asset 1 | $1,317,157 | 68.5% | $600,000 | 219.5% |
| Asset 2 | $227,407 | 11.8% | $200,000 | 113.7% |
| Asset 3 | $378,261 | 19.7% | $300,000 | 126.1% |
| Total | $1,922,825 | 100% | $1,100,000 | 174.8% |
Risk Allocation Charts
Component VaR vs Budget
VaR Contribution (%)
Model Assumptions
- Annual volatility inputs - VaR is expressed as annual
- Normal distribution assumed for asset returns
- Component VaRs sum exactly to total Portfolio VaR (Euler decomposition property)
- Single-period analysis - correlations and weights assumed constant
- Risk budgets are in dollar terms for the same confidence level and horizon
For educational purposes only. Not financial advice.
Understanding Risk Budgeting
What is Risk Budgeting?
Risk budgeting is a portfolio management technique that allocates risk (rather than capital) across different assets or strategies. Instead of asking "how much money should I put in each asset?", risk budgeting asks "how much risk should each asset contribute to the portfolio?"
where betai = Cov(Ri, Rp) / Var(Rp)
Component VaR vs Individual VaR
Component VaR
Risk contribution in context
Measures how much each asset contributes to total portfolio VaR, accounting for diversification. Sum of all component VaRs = Portfolio VaR.
Individual VaR
Standalone risk
Measures each asset's risk in isolation, ignoring correlations. Sum of individual VaRs is higher than Portfolio VaR (the gap is the diversification benefit).
The Diversification Benefit
The diversification benefit represents the risk reduction achieved by combining assets that are not perfectly correlated. It equals the sum of individual (standalone) VaRs minus the actual portfolio VaR:
- Higher diversification benefit: Assets have low or negative correlations - combining them reduces overall risk significantly
- Lower diversification benefit: Assets have high correlations - combining them provides less risk reduction
- Zero diversification benefit: All correlations equal 1 - no diversification effect at all
Frequently Asked Questions
Disclaimer
This calculator is for educational purposes only and assumes normally distributed returns with constant correlations. Actual risk budgeting involves additional factors like fat tails, changing correlations during market stress, and liquidity constraints. This tool should not be used for actual investment decisions without professional risk management oversight.
Related Calculators
Course by Ryan O'Connell, CFA, FRM
Value at Risk (VaR) Course
Master Value at Risk from theory to practice. Covers parametric, historical, and Monte Carlo VaR methods with hands-on Excel implementations.
- Parametric, Historical, and Monte Carlo VaR
- Marginal, Component, and Incremental VaR
- Backtesting and stress testing techniques
- Real-world risk management applications