RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Total Return Strategies for Multi-Asset Portfolios JF Trading FD Institutional Investor Journals SP 84 OP 100 VO 2008 IS 1 A1 Ulf Herold A1 Raimond Maurer A1 Michael Stamos A1 Huy Thanh Vo YR 2008 UL http://guides.pm-research.com/content/2008/1/84.abstract AB Traditional balanced funds with a more or less constant stock allocation cannot solve the conflict of the varying investment horizons most institutional investors face. To generate capital gains, the investor must accept large allocations in risky asset classes like equities, which is often difficult to reconcile with short-term requirements such as avoiding annual losses. One way around this problem is a risk-based total return strategy that explicitly controls for shortfall risk and at the same time uses the available risk budget effectively to enhance performance potential in the long run. Because such a strategy allows for greater shifts in asset class weights over time, it can start with larger allocations to stocks or other risky asset classes than static strategies. An extensive simulation study comparing this risk-based strategy to several dynamic asset allocation approaches in a backtest quantifies its short-run hedging effectiveness and long-run hedging costs.