Coherent risk measure

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A coherent risk measure is a risk measure ρ that satisfies properties of monotonicity, sub-additivity, homogeneity, and translational invariance. Consider a random outcome Zi viewed as an element of a linear space  \Z of measurable functions, defined on an appropriate sample space. According to [1], a function \rho : \Z\R is said to be coherent risk measure for Z if it satisfies the following properties.

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[edit] Properties

Monotonicity
If Z_1,Z_2 \in \Z \ and \ Z_1 \geq Z_2 ,\ then \ \rho(Z_1) \geq \rho(Z_2)
Sub-additivity
If Z_1,Z_2 \in \Z ,\ then \  \rho(Z_1 + Z_2) \leq \rho(Z_1) + \rho(Z_2)
Positive Homogeneity
If \alpha \ge 0 \ and \ Z \in \Z ,\  then  \ \rho(\alpha Z) \ = \ \alpha \rho(Z)
Translation Invariance
If \ a  \ \in \mathbb{R} \ and \ Z \in \Z ,\  then  \ \rho(Z + a) \ = \  \rho(Z) \ + \ a

[edit] Example: Value at Risk

It is well known that Value at risk is not, in general, a coherent risk measure as it does not respect the sub-additivity property. An immediate consequence is that Value at risk might discourage diversification.

Value at risk is, however, coherent, under the assumption of normally distributed losses.

[edit] References

[1] Artzner, Philippe, Freddy Delbaen, Jean-Marc Eber, David Heath (1999). Coherent Measures of Risk, Mathematical Finance 9 no. 3, 203-228

[edit] See also