Expected shortfall

Expected shortfall (ES) is a risk measure—a concept used in the field of financial risk measurement to evaluate the market risk or credit risk of a portfolio. The "expected shortfall at q% level" is the expected return on the portfolio in the worst of cases. ES is an alternative to value at risk that is more sensitive to the shape of the tail of the loss distribution.

Expected shortfall is also called conditional value at risk (CVaR),[1] average value at risk (AVaR), expected tail loss (ETL), and superquantile.[2]

ES estimates the risk of an investment in a conservative way, focusing on the less profitable outcomes. For high values of it ignores the most profitable but unlikely possibilities, while for small values of it focuses on the worst losses. On the other hand, unlike the discounted maximum loss, even for lower values of the expected shortfall does not consider only the single most catastrophic outcome. A value of often used in practice is 5%.[citation needed]

Expected shortfall is considered a more useful risk measure than VaR because it is a coherent spectral measure of financial portfolio risk. It is calculated for a given quantile-level and is defined to be the mean loss of portfolio value given that a loss is occurring at or below the -quantile.

  1. ^ Rockafellar, R. Tyrrell; Uryasev, Stanislav (2000). "Optimization of conditional value-at-risk" (PDF). Journal of Risk. 2 (3): 21–42. doi:10.21314/JOR.2000.038. S2CID 854622.
  2. ^ Rockafellar, R. Tyrrell; Royset, Johannes (2010). "On Buffered Failure Probability in Design and Optimization of Structures" (PDF). Reliability Engineering and System Safety. 95 (5): 499–510. doi:10.1016/j.ress.2010.01.001. S2CID 1653873.

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