The present invention relates to computer systems and more particularly to computer systems that aid in making decisions using optimization techniques relating to portfolios such as real estate portfolios.
Management of a large portfolio of real estate properties can present significant challenges, particularly when the number of properties is in the hundreds or thousands. For example, the managers of the portfolio may have objectives that are at least potentially in conflict with each other. To illustrate this with an example, an objective of increasing the amount of gains generated from selling properties may conflict with an objective of maintaining the amount of rental income produced from the portfolio. This conflict in objectives may arise with respect to a given property in that selling the property may provide the advantage of generating a gain, but may have the disadvantage of depriving the portfolio of rental income produced by the property. Moreover, real properties and/or the portfolio as a whole may be financially evaluated according to a number of different measurements, and improving the health of the portfolio with respect to some measurements may cause declines in other measurements of the portfolio's financial health.
The foregoing issues can be generalized as being applicable to other types of portfolios of assets. In general, like real properties, many types of assets or other items may be measured in terms of numerical performance measures, and actions taken with respect to the assets/items in a portfolio may have consequences that enhance some measured aspects of a portfolio while causing other measured aspects to decline. When the number of assets/items in a portfolio (or potentially available for inclusion in a portfolio) is large, there may be great difficulties in determining how best to make trade-offs inherent in conflicting sets of objectives.
To provide alternatives to, or alleviate problems inherent in, the prior art, the present invention introduces improved systems and methods and computer programs for making recommendations as to what actions to take with respect to a portfolio of items in order to optimize one or more aspects of the portfolio.
According to one embodiment, there is provided a method of operating a computer system. The method includes storing, in the computer system, a database that contains performance measure data regarding performance measures of a plurality of items. The method further includes inputting into the computer system a plurality of performance measure constraints. In addition, the method includes modeling the performance measure constraints with a set of equations. The equations include a plurality of variables. Each of the variables corresponds to a respective one of the items in the portfolio. Each of the variables is to be assigned a value from a group of values. The group of values includes at least two values. One of the two values indicates a recommendation to take an action with respect to one of the items that corresponds to a respective one of the variables. The other of the two values indicates a recommendation to take another action with respect to the item in question. In addition, the method includes using the computer system to solve the set of equations to generate one or more solutions that satisfy the performance measure constraints. As the term “action” is used herein and in the appended claims, omitting to take an action may also be considered to be taking an action. Thus, not selling (i.e., holding or retaining) an item is to be considered an action with respect to the item, and is a different action from selling the item.
Further, in some embodiments, there may be a plurality of solutions that result from solving the set of equations. Moreover, the method may further include inputting into the computer system an optimization goal, and using the computer system to evaluate the plurality of solutions to identify the solution that is optimal relative to the optimization goal. Also, the method may include presenting the solution that was identified as optimal as a recommended decision relative to taking actions with respect to the items in the portfolio.
With these and other advantages and features of the invention that will become hereinafter apparent, the invention may be more clearly understood by reference to the following detailed description of the invention, the appended claims, and the drawings attached herein.
To introduce some concepts of the invention in a general way, a mathematical model is provided to represent the effects of taking certain actions with respect to a portfolio of items. The mathematical model may be formed from a set of simultaneous equations. (As used herein and in the appended claims, the term “equation” refers to inequalities—i.e., mathematical statements that include the symbols “<”, “>”, “≦” or “≧”—as well as to mathematical statements that include the equal sign (“=”).) The variables in the equations may represent some or all of the items in the portfolio. Each variable may be assigned either a value of “1” or “0”, where the value “1” represents that an action is recommended to be taken with respect to the item which corresponds to the variable, and the value “0” represents a recommendation to take a different action with respect to the item. The equations may each represent a constraint, such as constraints measured in one of the performance measures of the portfolio, that the user of the system wishes to be produced with respect to the portfolio. The user may also enter a particular portfolio performance measure that the user wishes to optimize (maximize or minimize) while keeping within the constraints that the user has prescribed.
Software employed in accordance with the invention may solve the performance measure constraint equations to generate, if possible, one or more solutions that satisfy the performance measure constraint equations. If more than one solution is produced, software provided in accordance with the invention may evaluate all of the solutions in order to identify which solution is optimal relative to the performance measure that the user selected to be optimized. The system presents the resulting optimal solution to the user as a recommended set of actions to be taken with respect to the portfolio as well as a summary of financial metrics of the recommended solution.
The computer system 100 includes a processor 101, which may be a conventional microprocessor, or a number of processors operating in parallel. The processor 101 is in data communication with a communication interface 102, through which the computer system 100 is able to communicate with other devices, such as other computers. The processor 101 is also in data communication with a display screen 104, by which the computer system provides visual output to a user of the computer system. There may also be one or more printers (not shown) coupled to the processor 101 to allow the computer system to provide printed output. The computer system 100 may also include one or more input devices, such as a keyboard 106 and a computer mouse 108 or other pointing device. The keyboard 106 and the mouse 108 are in data communication with the processor 101.
The computer system also includes random access memory and/or other solid state memory devices, all represented by block 110 in
Also included in the computer system 100 is a storage device 112, such as a conventional hard disk drive or group of hard drives, in data communication with the processor 101. The storage device 112 may store a number of programs, such as a portfolio recommendation tool program 114, which is described below, and which is provided in accordance with the invention to control the processor 101 so that the computer system 100 operates in accordance with one or more aspects of the present invention. The storage device 112 may also store a conventional database manager program 116.
Also stored in the storage device 112 are one or more databases and/or data structures, including for example a portfolio database 118. The portfolio database 118 may store numerical performance measures for items included in a portfolio. In one particular embodiment of the invention, the portfolio database may store financial information and other information with respect to a portfolio of real estate holdings. The portfolio recommendation tool 114, as will be seen, may be operable by a user of the computer system 100 to generate a recommended list of properties to be sold and/or retained. Block 120 in
The storage device 112 may also store other programs (not indicated in the drawings) such as a conventional operating system, one or more device drivers, and a conventional spreadsheet program.
Further, the computer system 100 may include one or more drives (not indicated in the drawing) for reading data from and/or writing data to removable data storage media.
The user computers 206 may include, among other conventional features, browser software, a display screen and a mouse or other pointing device (none of which is separately shown) to allow the user computers to interact as client devices with screen display pages downloaded from the server 202. The server may store a real estate portfolio database (not separately indicated), or other asset database and may be programmed to provide to the user computers the portfolio recommendation tool functionality that will be described below.
At 302, data is loaded into the portfolio recommendation tool so that the portfolio recommendation tool can process the data, in accordance with inputs from the user, to produce a recommendation as to which properties are to be sold and which retained. The data may be loaded from or accessible in the portfolio database 118 (
The loading of the portfolio data may be performed in response to the user interacting with the screen display shown in
Referring again to
Referring once more to
In order to enter the performance measure constraints, the user may interact with a region 416 in the
In the particular example illustrated in
(1) Net income not to exceed $400,000,000.
(2) Net book income of properties sold not to exceed $230,000,000.
(3) Cash on cash not less than 0.00% and not to exceed 20.00%.
(4) Number of transactions (number of properties to be sold) not less than 10 and not to exceed 40.
The constraints entered using the region 416 in
The
At 308 in
For each constraint that applies to an aggregate of properties to be sold, the equation defined for a given constraint is in the form
where:
If the constraint applies to the portfolio as a whole, then the summation in Equation (1) is taken over all the properties in the portfolio. If the constraint applies only to a “breakdown”, then the summation in Equation (1) is taken over the properties in the relevant breakdown group.
For each constraint that applies to an aggregate of properties to be retained, the equation defined for the constraint is in the form
Equations (1) and (2) apply in the case of performance measures A-K listed above. In the case of performance measures L-O, the constraint uses a weighted average on Net Book Investment (NBI). The constraint (if any) for these measures is modeled with Equation (3) below for Held properties and with Equation (4) below for Sold properties.
The user may further constrain the process of generating recommendations by prescribing that certain properties are to be sold and/or that certain properties are to be retained, regardless of other considerations. For these properties, the constraints in question force the value of xp to be “0” for properties constrained to be retained, and force the value of xp to be “1” for properties constrained to be sold.
In some constraints, properties may be assigned to a group of properties, with all properties in the group to be sold, or with all properties in the group to be held. To implement this type of constraint, the database 118 may include a “Group ID” field. If two or more properties have the same value in the “Group ID” field, then that set of properties must all be treated in the same way, i.e., either all sold or all held. A constraint of this type may be implemented as follows:
As suggested by previous discussion, the set of constraint equations may also include a limit (upper and/or lower bound) on the number of properties to be sold. Such a constraint may be implemented with Equation (5) below.
where TL is the lower bound on the number of properties sold and TU is the upper bound on the number of properties sold.
At 310 in
Continuing to refer to
The solution may be presented to the user in a number of different aspects. For example, the indication at 426 in
Aggregated performance measures for the optimal solution are presented at column 428 in
According to one way in which the invention may be operated, the user may enter plural sets of constraints to investigate how changing one or more of the constraints may affect the optimal solution and the extent to which the optimization goal is met. Each set of constraints may be referred to as a scenario. One possible scenario is represented by the constraints entered as indicated in
In some embodiments, the computer system may store the various scenarios and the aggregated results of the scenarios for subsequent reference and comparison by the user.
The user is permitted to actuate a button 434 (
Referring again to
In general, if the number of constraints included in a scenario is large and/or the constraints are relatively tight, there is a greater chance that the scenario will fail to produce a solution. Accordingly, it may be desirable in operating the portfolio recommendation tool to start with a scenario that has relatively few and relatively loose constraints, so that at least one solution is produced. Thereafter, the user may elect to gradually and/or sequentially add and/or tighten constraints to attempt to achieve some potentially conflicting goals while at least partially achieving the optimization goal input at 304 in
In the examples depicted up to this point, the portfolio recommendation tool is adapted to recommend a set of hold/sell decisions with respect to a portfolio of real properties. However, in other embodiments, the portfolio recommendation tool may be modified to support other types of portfolio-related decision making in regard to other types of portfolios.
As one alternative example, the user may have available a “virtual” portfolio of real properties that the user (or the users employer) does not currently hold but that are available for purchase by the user or his/her employer. The binary variable values in this case may correspond to recommendations to acquire or not to acquire individual properties available for purchase.
As another type of example, the portfolio of holdings, instead of being commercial real estate, may rather consist of energy-related assets such as energy generation facilities and/or energy transportation facilities. “Energy generation facilities” include power generation plants; “energy transportation facilities” include oil or gas pipelines, and/or electricity transmission lines. The binary variable values again may correspond to recommendations to sell or retain. Alternatively, a virtual portfolio of energy-related assets available for acquisition may be the subject of the desired recommendation, and the binary variable values may correspond to acquire/don't acquire recommendations. The performance measures defined for such assets may include capacity to produce and/or transport certain amounts of energy or energy-related commodities.
In still other embodiments, the portfolio may consist of a number of transportable assets such as items of heavy equipment, military equipment, or military or other operational units of personnel and/or equipment. The recommendation that is desired may concern a decision to deploy or not to deploy the assets to a theater of operations or to a location of emergency remedial activity, etc. The performance measures defined for the assets may (among others) relate to operational capabilities of the assets and/or to the number of personnel in a unit and/or to the quantity of transportation capacity required to accomplish deployment of the assets.
In other embodiments, the portfolio may consist of medical facilities such as hospitals, clinics and medical offices. The recommendation that is desired may concern a decision to divest or not to divest at least some of the medical facilities in the portfolio. “To divest” means one or more of closing, selling or spinning off a facility to other ownership. The performance measures defined for the medical facilities may relate to, e.g., square footage, number of beds, employee head count, annual operating budget, and/or operating deficit or surplus.
In other embodiments, the portfolio may consist of programs in a television network's prime-time schedule. The recommendation that is desired may concern a decision as to whether to cancel the programs. The performance measures defined for the programs may relate to ratings/audience share in general and/or in certain audience categories. Other performance measures may relate to cost per episode.
In other embodiments, the portfolio may consist of athletes who are under contract/recruiting commitment letter and/or who are available for drafting/acquisition/recruitment. One portfolio to which this embodiment may be applicable is to athletes currently under contract by a professional sports franchise. Another (“virtual”) portfolio may be all athletes currently under contract by other teams in a professional sports league. Another portfolio may be some or all student athletes available for a current year's professional draft in a given sport. Another portfolio may be some or all high school athletes in a given sport who are currently eligible for college recruitment. Another portfolio may be all athletes available for selection for a fantasy sports “team”. The recommendation that is desired may concern whether to recruit, draft, trade for, trade away, sign to an agreement or include an athlete in a fantasy sports team. The performance measures may include some or all of the myriad statistics used to evaluate and/or record individual athletic performance in a given team sport. Other performance measures may relate to a position or positions played by athletes. Other performance measures may relate to bio-statistics such as age, height, weight, running speed, etc. Other performance measures may relate to a measure of the relative merit of a school's or college's athletic program in a particular sport. Other performance measures may relate to the contract compensation of a professional athlete. Other performance measures may relate to the date of expiration of a professional athlete's contract.
Other types of portfolio-related decision making, and/or relating to other types of portfolios, may be supported in other embodiments. The performance measures included in the portfolio-related data may of course vary depending on the nature of the items in the portfolio.
The optimization goal may, but need not, be entered by interacting with the same screen display or set of screen displays used to enter performance measure constraints.
A “computer usable medium” refers to any physical object on which program instructions may be stored in machine-readable form, and thus includes solid state memory devices such as RAM, ROM or flash memory and also includes disk-shaped storage devices such as hard disk drives, CD-ROMs, floppy disks, etc.
It will be appreciated that the details of the screen displays appended hereto may be modified in a number of ways while still providing substantially the same functionality to the user. For example, there may be more or fewer than the two “breakdown constraint” input screens shown in
The present invention has the technical effect of facilitating and improving the operation of data processing equipment in managing real estate portfolios or other collections of assets.
As used herein and in the appended claims, “database” may refer to one or more related or unrelated databases. Data may be “stored” in raw, excerpted, summarized and/or analyzed form.
The present invention has been described in terms of several embodiments solely for the purpose of illustration. Persons skilled in the art will recognize from this description that the invention is not limited to the embodiments described, but may be practiced with modifications and alterations limited only by the spirit and scope of the appended claims.
This application claims the benefit of provisional patent application Ser. No. 60/859,446, filed Nov. 16, 2006, and incorporated herein by reference.
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