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by danuker
1256 days ago
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The Sharpe ratio gives you a good score if you lose everything (-100%) and then you gain a 20% return for 10 years. But once you lost everything, there is no capital to invest, so the score should be infinitely bad. Arithmetic averages are dangerous in geometric environments. Use the expected log-return or the geometric mean instead of the arithmetic one in Sharpe's formula. But maximizing log-return was proven by Kelly to be optimal, and you don't need to further penalize volatility. |
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The subjective satisfaction we get from a certain amount of money is something that would take a lot of experimental science to figure out, and subject to change as society changes. How high up Maslows hierarchy of needs can you climb, and how long can you stay there until age brings you low?
Now where log returns really shine is if you make a very large number of similar bets. Thats where the asymptotic behavior dominates. But if you make a big once in a lifetime decision of whether to bet the farm on a new business idea, that's where you have to figure out your own values.