Top-Down, Bottom-Up, Upside-Down: Rethinking Replication Risk

4th September, 2025 | Alternatives
Authored by DBi

It has become common wisdom that factor-based replication is a top-down approach while risk premia strategies are bottom-up. Factor models, so the story goes, assume hedge fund returns can be explained by broad, observable exposures such as equities, rates, currencies, or commodities. Risk premia strategies, by contrast, are constructed from the bottom up, assembling portfolios of individual building blocks such as carry, momentum, or volatility selling. 
 
This classification is sensible when viewed through the lens of portfolio construction. But when we shift the focus to model risk, the picture reverses. Factor replication, far from being “top-down,” actually allows risk to flow upward from the data. Risk premia, meanwhile, is more prescriptive, embedding the designer’s risk views at the modeling stage. 

Construction Logic vs. Model Risk

Comparison of Approaches

Implications for Investors

For allocators, the conventional “top-down vs. bottom-up” framing obscures the real trade-off. The choice is not just about construction but about how much model discretion one is willing to accept.

  • Factor replication offers transparency and a close link to hedge fund returns but it can be seen “too simple” for investors.
  • Risk premia is more “hedge fund – like” but risks rigidity and misalignment with hedge fund dynamics.

Investors should therefore ask not only what approach best captures hedge fund returns, but also whose risk assumptions they are comfortable underwriting: the market’s (through realized exposures) or the modeler’s (through prescriptive design)?

Conclusion

Reframing the debate around model risk flips the conventional wisdom:

 

Recognizing this distinction helps investors make clearer, more deliberate choices when allocating to replication strategies and ultimately, when deciding how much model risk they are prepared to bear.

 

Authored by DBi