A different question than "what's likely"
Monte Carlo simulation explores the range of probable outcomes. Stress testing asks something more pointed and more useful for managing risk: what breaks this portfolio, why does it break, and what should be done about it? Instead of averaging across many random futures, stress testing subjects the portfolio to specific, severe conditions — and watches where it cracks. The two are complementary: simulation maps the distribution, stress testing probes the tail on purpose.
Historical replays: would I have survived that?
The most intuitive stress test replays a named historical event against your current portfolio. What would the 2008 financial crisis, the 2020 COVID crash, or a sharp rate spike have done to these exact holdings? Historical replays ground the abstract idea of risk in events that actually happened, and they are powerful precisely because no one can dismiss them as unrealistic — they occurred. The answer reframes risk from a statistic into a visceral "this is the drawdown you would have lived through."
Custom shocks and factor contributions
History does not repeat exactly, so stress testing also builds hypothetical shocks: what if rates jump 200 basis points, equities fall 30%, and credit spreads widen simultaneously? Constructing these custom factor shocks lets you test scenarios that have not happened yet but plausibly could. The deeper insight comes from decomposing the loss into factor, residual, and liquidity contributions — answering not just how much you would lose but what drives the loss. A portfolio that looks diversified may reveal that a single factor accounts for most of its stressed loss, which changes what you do to defend it.
Reverse stress testing: working backward from disaster
The most sophisticated technique flips the question. Instead of "what happens if X occurs?" reverse stress asks "what conditions would produce a loss large enough to matter — say, a 25% drawdown or breaching a funding floor?" Working backward from an unacceptable outcome to the scenarios that cause it surfaces vulnerabilities you might never have thought to test. It answers the question that actually keeps people up at night: not "is this scenario bad?" but "what is the combination that would genuinely hurt me, and how plausible is it?"
Thresholds and vulnerability: turning fear into triggers
Stress testing is only useful if it drives action. That means defining thresholds — levels of stressed loss or vulnerability that warrant a response — and reviewing where the portfolio sits against them on a schedule, not just once. A breach becomes a trigger: a signal to hedge, rebalance, or escalate to a committee. This converts a frightening chart into a disciplined process, where a known vulnerability has a predefined response rather than prompting panic in the moment.
Closing the loop
A stress test that ends in a scary number and no action is theater. The disciplined pattern closes the loop: hedge the exposure, rebalance to reduce it, consciously dismiss it as acceptable, or route it to governance follow-up — and when the results actually change a planning decision, launch simulation or what-if analysis to work through the response. The point is always a decision, not a dashboard.
Stress testing inside a governed plan
Like the rest of the platform, stress testing fits the governed-autonomy pattern: run the replays and shocks, decompose the contributions, check thresholds continuously, and surface breaches as actionable signals with committee packs and recommended follow-up — while any consequential hedge or trade flows through review and approval. The analysis is continuous; the response stays under human control.
The takeaway
Stress testing answers the question simulation cannot: not "what's likely" but "what breaks, why, and at what point." Replay real history, construct custom shocks, decompose the loss into its drivers, and use reverse stress to find the conditions that would genuinely hurt — then attach thresholds and a closing action to each. Done that way, stress testing turns the vague fear of a crash into a concrete, rehearsed plan.



