Abstract Most portfolio optimization frameworks assume static objectives and constraints, making them fragile under regime shifts, transaction frictions, and evolving information. Existing LLM-based methods focus on signal generation without governing execution or constraint elasticity, while reinforcement learning approaches often lack transparency and cost discipline. This lack of a unified, interpretable architecture hinders adaptability and accountability during live rebalancing. We address this gap by introducing an agentic portfolio optimization framework that integrates regime-aware convex optimization, LLM-derived sentiment and uncertainty features, and a constrained reinforcement learning controller in a closed loop. The agent senses market and news data, infers regimes, and dynamically adjusts objectives, risk budgets, and position limits, while enforcing friction-aware execution through Sharpe-gated trade activation, partial rebalancing, and turnover budgeting. In a 50-stock S & P 500 portfolio tested under walk-forward evaluation (2021–2025 Q1), agentic portfolios consistently outperform non-agentic benchmarks, with Sharpe ratio gains of up to +0.373 (NSGA-3), persisting net of transaction costs and alongside lower turnover. These results highlight the value of combining forward-looking signals, regime-conditioned intent, and disciplined execution within a unified transparent, adaptive agentic architecture. Future research should explore multi-asset extensions, richer textual and alternative data for regime inference, explainability metrics for LLM-driven signals, and hybrid architectures blending deterministic control with selective policy learning for extreme market conditions.
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Lamukanyani Alson Mantshimuli
John Weirstrass Muteba Mwamba
International Journal of Data Science and Analytics
University of Johannesburg
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Mantshimuli et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69b257af96eeacc4fcec6913 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s41060-026-01066-0