A Real Options Perspective on R&D Portfolio Diversification
This paper shows that the presence of conditional staging in R&D (Research & Development) has a critical impact on portfolio risk, and changes diversification arguments when a portfolio is constructed. When R&D projects exhibit option-like characteristics, correlation between projects plays a more complicated role than traditional portfolio diversification would suggest. Real option theory argues that research projects with conditional phases have option-like risk and return properties, and are different from unconditional projects. We show that although the risk of a portfolio always depends on the correlation between projects, a portfolio of conditional R&D projects with real option characteristics has fundamentally different risk than a portfolio of unconditional projects. When conditional R&D projects are negatively correlated, portfolio risk is hardly reduced by diversification. When projects are positively correlated, however, diversification is more effective than these tools predict.<P> This discussion paper resulted in an article in <I>Research Policy</I> (2009). Volume 38, pages 1150-1158.
The text is part of a series Tinbergen Institute Discussion Papers Number 08-003/2
Classification:
G31 - Capital Budgeting; Investment Policy ; G32 - Financing Policy; Capital and Ownership Structure ; O30 - Technological Change; Research and Development. General ; O32 - Management of Technological Innovation and R&D