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Investment Management Summary

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A summary to the entire course Investment Management. This summary contains all the information to let you pass the exam. I should know, as I made it in my first attempt. The document is ordered by weeks, making it easy for you to look something up. Not only that, the document also contains all the formulas that are not on the formula sheet.

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Uploaded on
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Number of pages
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Written in
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Investment Management
summary

,Week 1: asset allocation and portfolio management
Chapter 5
A few questions to ask when considering an investment in an asset:
- how do you expect index to behave and move?  high movement = high risk
- is it worth it?  if risk is high, will you have a return?
- how much do you want to invest, if it is worth it?
Holding period of return:
 what the return will be
 return: how much prices change with respect to some initial price
Not formula sheet!
 you look at price change, and possibly dividend over a certain time period

Expected HPR = E[Rit]
 what you think return will be
 e.g. you expect prices to be either 120 or 90 in time period 1. In period 0 it was 100.
 so, investment may gain 20 or lose 10
 you also need to know the probability of these price changes. For now, let’s assume both
have equal as big a chance of occurring.



{
1
120→ probability=
2
1
90→ probability=
2

E[R] = ½ x 120 + ½ x 90 = 60 + 45 = 105
Problem: for 2 or 3 price situations this is an easy calculation, but it can occur you have 20+
situations.
 Excel solves this: SUMPRODUCT




(random example showing how to operate sum product)
Excess return:
 the difference between the return of a risky asset versus the return of a risk-free asset
Not on formula sheet
 extra reward for taking risk

Risk premium:
 since you do not exactly know what your risky return will be at most points, we need to
calculate it using expected returns

, Not on formula sheet
 risk premium is the extra return on top of the risk-free rate you demand for taking the
riskier alternative
 RM – RF


Some OIMb reminders:




 averages or means are a measurement for the expected return
 standard deviation is a measurement for the risk
 variance is given on the formula sheet as σ2, std. deviation is just the square root of that

Other statistical measurements:
- skewness characterises the asymmetry of a distribution around its mean
- kurtosis measures the size of a distribution’s tails
 important because it matters for significance levels



Sharpe ratio:
 looks at the trade-off between risk and return
Formula sheet
 risk premium / std. deviation of the excess returns



Std. deviation is not the only measurement of risk:
 VaR or Value-at-Risk
 quantifies the total risk of a portfolio
Not on formula sheet
 way to indicate the probability of a confidence level for which you are sure not to lose
more than X amount of money.
 you need a table to calculate the rest, as this is not a mathematical equation
e.g. std. dev. = 20 million, average mean of 0, normally distributed and 99% conf interval.
 Excel NORM.INV.N (,99;0;1) = 2,326348
(in which ,99 = 99% conf interval, 0 is average mean and 1 is normal
distribution)
 VAR = $20 million x 2.326348 = 46.53
 so, with 99% certainty you can say the portfolio is not going to lose more than $46.53
million.
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4 year ago

Hi, Sytze. I see you only give the summary 3 stars. That's a pity. Could you explain why you only give the sv 3 stars and how it can be improved?

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Alles wat je moet weten over (bijna) alle vakken van je studie

Hoi, ik ben Billy! Ik ben vierdejaars student aan de Radboud Universiteit, bachelor studie economie en bedr. economie en nu master Econmics, Behavior and Policy. Samenvattingen zijn voor mij de makkelijkste manier om een vak te leren, en ik deel die samenvattingen graag met diegenen die ze nodig hebben. Als je ergens een vraag over hebt, stuur me dan gerust een berichtje. Ook bij problemen en / of andere opmerkingen hoor ik dat graag! Als mijn samenvatting je geholpen heeft, laat dan een goede rating achter. Dat helpt mij en anderen na jou :)

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