# Load packages
# Core
library(tidyverse)
library(tidyquant)
# Source function
source("../00_scripts/simulate_accumulation")
Revise the code below.
symbols <- c("TM", "SBUX", "AEO", "BBW")
prices <- tq_get(x = symbols,
get = "stock.prices",
from = "2012-12-31",
to = "2017-12-31")
asset_returns_tbl <- prices %>%
group_by(symbol) %>%
tq_transmute(select = adjusted,
mutate_fun = periodReturn,
period = "monthly",
type = "log") %>%
slice(-1) %>%
ungroup() %>%
set_names(c("asset", "date", "returns"))
Revise the code for weights.
# symbols
symbols <- asset_returns_tbl %>% distinct(asset) %>% pull()
symbols
## [1] "AEO" "BBW" "SBUX" "TM"
# weights
weights <- c(.3, .25, .25, .2)
weights
## [1] 0.30 0.25 0.25 0.20
w_tbl <- tibble(symbols, weights)
w_tbl
## # A tibble: 4 × 2
## symbols weights
## <chr> <dbl>
## 1 AEO 0.3
## 2 BBW 0.25
## 3 SBUX 0.25
## 4 TM 0.2
portfolio_returns_tbl <- asset_returns_tbl %>%
tq_portfolio(assets_col = asset,
returns_col = returns,
weights = w_tbl,
rebalance_on = "months",
col_rename = "returns")
portfolio_returns_tbl
## # A tibble: 60 × 2
## date returns
## <date> <dbl>
## 1 2013-01-31 0.0291
## 2 2013-02-28 0.0653
## 3 2013-03-28 0.00152
## 4 2013-04-30 0.0380
## 5 2013-05-31 0.0803
## 6 2013-06-28 -0.0255
## 7 2013-07-31 0.0846
## 8 2013-08-30 -0.0920
## 9 2013-09-30 0.0197
## 10 2013-10-31 0.0753
## # ℹ 50 more rows
# Get mean portfolio return
mean_port_return <- mean(portfolio_returns_tbl$returns)
mean_port_return
## [1] 0.008921393
# Get standard deviation of portfolio returns
stddev_port_return <- sd(portfolio_returns_tbl$returns)
stddev_port_return
## [1] 0.04974121
No need
# Create a vector of 1s as a starting point
sims <- 51
starts <- rep(100, sims) %>%
set_names(paste0("sim", 1:sims))
starts
## sim1 sim2 sim3 sim4 sim5 sim6 sim7 sim8 sim9 sim10 sim11 sim12 sim13
## 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100
## sim14 sim15 sim16 sim17 sim18 sim19 sim20 sim21 sim22 sim23 sim24 sim25 sim26
## 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100
## sim27 sim28 sim29 sim30 sim31 sim32 sim33 sim34 sim35 sim36 sim37 sim38 sim39
## 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100
## sim40 sim41 sim42 sim43 sim44 sim45 sim46 sim47 sim48 sim49 sim50 sim51
## 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100
# Simulate
# For reproducible research
set.seed(1234)
monte_carlo_sim_51 <-starts %>%
# Simulate
map_dfc(.x = .,
.f = ~simulate_accumulation(initial_value = .x,
N = 240,
mean_return = mean_port_return,
sd_return = stddev_port_return)) %>%
# Add column month
mutate(month = 1:nrow(.)) %>%
select(month, everything()) %>%
# Rearrange column names
set_names(c("month", names(starts))) %>%
# Transform to long form
pivot_longer(cols = -month, names_to = "sim", values_to = "growth")
monte_carlo_sim_51
## # A tibble: 12,291 × 3
## month sim growth
## <int> <chr> <dbl>
## 1 1 sim1 100
## 2 1 sim2 100
## 3 1 sim3 100
## 4 1 sim4 100
## 5 1 sim5 100
## 6 1 sim6 100
## 7 1 sim7 100
## 8 1 sim8 100
## 9 1 sim9 100
## 10 1 sim10 100
## # ℹ 12,281 more rows
# Find quantiles
monte_carlo_sim_51 %>%
group_by(sim) %>%
summarise(growth = last(growth)) %>%
ungroup() %>%
pull(growth) %>%
quantile(probs = c(0, 0.25, 0.5, 0.75, 1)) %>%
round(2)
## 0% 25% 50% 75% 100%
## 127.08 463.40 779.62 1250.84 2490.52
Line Plot of Simulations with Max, Median, and Min
# Step 1 Summarize data into max, median, and min of last value
sim_summary <- monte_carlo_sim_51 %>%
group_by(sim) %>%
summarise(growth = last(growth)) %>%
ungroup() %>%
summarise(max = max(growth),
median = median(growth),
min = min(growth))
sim_summary
## # A tibble: 1 × 3
## max median min
## <dbl> <dbl> <dbl>
## 1 2491. 780. 127.
# Step 2 Plot
monte_carlo_sim_51 %>%
# Filter for max, median, and min sim
group_by(sim) %>%
filter(last(growth) == sim_summary$max |
last(growth) == sim_summary$median |
last(growth) == sim_summary$min) %>%
ungroup() %>%
#Plot
ggplot(aes(x = month, y = growth, color = sim)) +
geom_line() +
theme(legend.position = "none") +
theme(plot.title = element_text(hjust = 0.5)) +
theme(plot.subtitle = element_text(hjust = 0.5)) +
labs(title = "Similating Growth of $1 Over 120 Months",
subtitle = "Max, Median, and Minimun Simulation")
Based on the Monte Carlo simulation results, how much should you expect from your $100 investment after 20 years? What is the best-case scenario? What is the worst-case scenario? What are limitations of this simulation analysis?
In the best case scenario, a $100 investment will turn into $2491 and worst case scenario, a $100 investment will turn into $127. One limitation of this analysis is that normal distribution of returns is assumed when in reality they are often negatively skewed, making these results more optimistic than reality. Another limitation is that the data set used is from 2012-2017 which makes the mean on the higher side due to the market during these years. Expanding the period would include a variety of markets and provide a more realistic outlook.