Factor decomposition is a cornerstone of modern quantitative finance, providing the analytical framework for understanding the drivers of portfolio risk and return.
What Is Factor Decomposition?
At its core, factor decomposition breaks down portfolio performance into systematic components (factors) and idiosyncratic (security-specific) components. This separation allows investors to understand whether returns are driven by broad market movements or individual security selection.
Common Factor Categories
Modern factor models typically incorporate several categories of factors:
- Market Factors: Exposure to broad market movements
- Style Factors: Value, growth, momentum, quality, and size
- Sector Factors: Industry-specific exposures
- Country/Region Factors: Geographic exposures for international portfolios
Practical Applications
Factor decomposition serves multiple purposes in portfolio management. Risk managers use it to identify unintended exposures and potential vulnerabilities. Portfolio constructors use it to build portfolios with desired factor tilts while controlling for unwanted risks.
Performance attribution based on factor decomposition helps explain why a portfolio outperformed or underperformed its benchmark, distinguishing between factor timing and security selection skill.