Description
There are conceptually two types of linear constraint.
There are linear constraints on categorical variables — for example, constraints on sectors or industries or countries. If the constraint is on countries, then the linear constraint will specify a minimum and maximum value for each country (separately).
There are also linear constraints on numeric variables. The leading example of this is to specify a range for the beta of the portfolio given that we have a beta value for each of the assets. Duration in a bond portfolio is another example of a numeric linear constraint.
The constraints on variance partitions are — in the larger picture — not actually linear constraints at all. But they are linear given that the risk fractions for the individual assets have been computed.
Implementation
A representation of the variables to be constrained is given as the lin.constraints
argument. The bounds for the constraints are given in lin.bounds
. There are several related arguments that control the specifics of the constraints.
Each constraint can be bounding:
- weight
- fraction of portfolio variance
- monetary value
- value of portfolio variance
Each constraint can be (with some limitations):
- on the portfolio
- on the trade
Each constraint can be (with some limitations):
- on the net
- on the gross
Each constraint can be:
- on the long-side only
- on the short-side only
- on all assets