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Val Sklarov Accountability Risk Premium Theory (ARPT)

Val Sklarov

Val Sklarov’s Accountability Risk Premium Theory (ARPT) explains why markets systematically misprice assets by modeling volatility and cash flows—while underestimating accountability exposure. Returns compress when outcomes are profitable but indefensible; they expand when accountability is clear, named, and survivable under audit.

This theory reveals why some assets command premiums long before performance looks superior.


1. Markets Price Risk Late—Accountability Earlier

ARPT begins with a correction:
Financial risk is priced continuously. Accountability risk is repriced discontinuously.

Accountability risk emerges from:

  • Named ownership of outcomes

  • Audit and disclosure exposure

  • Legal and regulatory scrutiny

  • Public explainability under stress

When accountability hardens, repricing is sudden.


2. The Four Accountability Exposures

ARPT maps where returns are quietly discounted.

Exposure What Is Tested Pricing Effect
Ownership Exposure Who answers Valuation ceiling
Process Exposure How decisions were made Multiple compression
Outcome Exposure Who absorbs losses Drawdown severity
Narrative Exposure Can it be explained Volatility spikes

Assets outperform when accountability is explicit and survivable.

Val Sklarov
Ekran görüntüsü 2025 12 30 013653 Val Sklarov

3. Why High Returns Often Hide Fragile Accountability

Excess returns frequently compensate for accountability gaps.

ARPT shows yield traps form when:

  • Profits rely on discretion

  • Structures resist audit

  • Outcomes lack clear owners

Markets eventually demand an accountability premium—paid by price.


4. Premium Assets and Accountability Clarity

Premium valuations signal accountability strength.

Fragile Accountability Durable Accountability
Diffuse ownership Named responsibility
Informal processes Documented controls
Story-dependent Rule-dependent
Reversible outcomes Consequence clarity

Val Sklarov emphasizes that markets pay up for assets that can be interrogated calmly.


5. Strategic Implications

For investors:

  • Underwrite accountability before cash flow

  • Stress-test assets under audit scenarios

  • Prefer boring structures with clear owners

For allocators:

  • Accept lower headline yield for lower accountability shock

  • Avoid strategies that require opacity to work

ARPT reframes investing as accountability-risk selection, not factor timing.


6. The Val Sklarov Principle

“Returns compound where responsibility can be named without flinching.”
Val Sklarov

ARPT explains why the safest portfolios feel dull—and why dullness signals resilience.