100% de satisfacción garantizada Inmediatamente disponible después del pago Tanto en línea como en PDF No estas atado a nada 4.2 TrustPilot
logo-home
Resumen

Investment and Portfolio Theory 2 Full Course Summary

Puntuación
3.0
(3)
Vendido
15
Páginas
26
Subido en
17-05-2021
Escrito en
2020/2021

This summary spans the chapters 4, 20 - 26 as well as Carhart (1997). Many colorful graphs and equations to illustrate the theories better with emphasis on real world examples. Main topics span Asset valuation, Derivatives and Portfolio Management

Mostrar más Leer menos
Institución
Grado












Ups! No podemos cargar tu documento ahora. Inténtalo de nuevo o contacta con soporte.

Libro relacionado

Escuela, estudio y materia

Institución
Estudio
Grado

Información del documento

¿Un libro?
No
¿Qué capítulos están resumidos?
Chapter 20 to 26
Subido en
17 de mayo de 2021
Archivo actualizado en
17 de mayo de 2021
Número de páginas
26
Escrito en
2020/2021
Tipo
Resumen

Temas

Vista previa del contenido

Week 1 Notes Chapter 4: Mutual Funds + Chapter 26: Hedge Funds



Mutual Funds

= intermediary (institution) to manage other people’s money

Specialized skills and (asset specific) knowledge
Cost efficiency
Diversification and liquidity

Why are mutual funds important?

Asset management of pension funds often delegated to mutual funds
Primary way of individuals to invest
Delegation of stock selection and risk management to asset managers


→ US Stock market ≈ 5000 company stock but also 5000 equity mutual funds!

Types of investment companies




➔ Unit Investment Trust

≡ fixed portfolio of uniform assets deposited in a trust fund
≡ trust fund sells shares of its trust = redeemable trust certificates
No trading or change in composition
Investors invest in unit trust to gain exposure to certain pool of assets within
their broader portfolios

, ➔ Open-end mutual funds

Company sets up a fund (with specified target industry) → board of directors elect a fund manager (in-house or
contracted) → fund management invests capital and is paid management fees

Open-end: no restriction on the amount of shares the fund can issue
If the trust wants to issue more shares it must buy more of the underlying assets

Redeemable trust certificated (trust shares) are priced at NAV net asset value

= if an investor wants to cash out, the fund must buy it back at NAV




➔ Close-end mutual funds

Fixed amount of trust shares issued and outstanding
Traded on the stock market just like stocks
Price of trust share relative to its NAV can vary (premium or discount)

= if an investor wants to cash out another investor needs to buy the shares from him




➔ Exchange traded funds ETFs

Mix of closed and open-end funds
No restrictions on the shares issued and outstanding

Advantages: Disadvantages
• Can trade marginally above or below NAV
• Trade continuously like stocks + low cost • Must be purchased from a broker
• Can be sold or purchased on margin
• Tax efficient (when investors buy and sell to and
from each other, no capital gain tax triggered for
ETF provider)




Zero-fee funds make money by:

- Lending out assets to short sellers
- Spillover effects to funds with higher fee structure

,Performance of Mutual funds




→ always take the lesser of purchases and sales




Costs of Mutual funds

Expense ratio (operating expenses) → administrative and advisory fees
Marketing and distribution costs → pay brokers of advisors
Front-end load → sales charge when investors first buy the fund (around 6%)
Back-end load → sales charge when you exit the fund (starts at 5-6%, reduced by 1% each year)
→ Goal is to tether investors to the fund
12b-1 charge → compensation for distribution costs and commissions paid to brokers



A Mutual fund can issue different classes of redeemable shares
Difference = fee structure

Expense ratio is very important in the long run because of
cumulative and re-invested distributed capital gains and dividends




Performance measurement




Implications for investors

o After fees, active investing is a negative sum game
o Pay attention to poor benchmarking and reaching-for-yield behavior
o Pay attention to fees

,Performance on Active Investors

Empirical evidence: 1% underperformance BEFORE FEES to Wilshire 5000
index (= total public equity market)

Evidence for persistent superior performance (due to skill not just luck) us
weak but suggestive
Bad performance is more likely to persist




Hedge Funds

≡ Not constrained to using leverage (mutual funds are restricted)
≡ Only institutional investors or high net worth individuals
≡ Very important to market efficiency
≡ Hedging = market neutral strategies, making money in every market condition
≡ Lower share ratio than S&P 500



Fee Structure

- Management fee typically 2% of assets under management
- Incentive (performance) fee = 20% of investment returns above benchmark (hurdle rate)
- High water mark: performance fees only must be paid when hedge funds exceeds its highest value (new all-time
high) after a loss-making period, this ensures that commissions are not paid when the hedge fund is doing poorly

, Hedge Fund Style 1: Statistical Arbitrage

= market-neutral strategy on pairs trading (using to highly correlated stocks) to identify temporary mispricing

Using quantitative research tools such as data mining and automated trading with algorithms

Based on the law of large numbers: more than 50% of positions will be profitable




Hedge Fund Style 2: Portable Alpha

Based on a single risk type (pure play) with all other risk hedged away

Step 1: invest wherever you can find alpha (long position)

Step 2. Hedge the systemic risk of an investment (beta = 0) to isolate its alpha

Step 3: establish exposure to desired market sectors by using passive products

Example:

An investor wants to invest in a stock with positive alpha but the S&P500 is expected to decline

➔ Hedge beta exposure by selling S&P 500 futures contracts




Hedge Ratio




Performance measurement of Hedge funds

7-factor models
4 market factors: equity market, equity size, bond market, credit spread
3 trends: bonds, commodities, currencies
$9.69
Accede al documento completo:
Comprado por 15 estudiantes

100% de satisfacción garantizada
Inmediatamente disponible después del pago
Tanto en línea como en PDF
No estas atado a nada


Documento también disponible en un lote

Reseñas de compradores verificados

Se muestran los 3 comentarios
4 año hace

4 año hace

4 año hace

3.0

3 reseñas

5
0
4
1
3
1
2
1
1
0
Reseñas confiables sobre Stuvia

Todas las reseñas las realizan usuarios reales de Stuvia después de compras verificadas.

Conoce al vendedor

Seller avatar
Los indicadores de reputación están sujetos a la cantidad de artículos vendidos por una tarifa y las reseñas que ha recibido por esos documentos. Hay tres niveles: Bronce, Plata y Oro. Cuanto mayor reputación, más podrás confiar en la calidad del trabajo del vendedor.
mathiasm1 Universiteit van Amsterdam
Seguir Necesitas iniciar sesión para seguir a otros usuarios o asignaturas
Vendido
52
Miembro desde
4 año
Número de seguidores
44
Documentos
10
Última venta
3 semanas hace

3.9

11 reseñas

5
5
4
3
3
1
2
1
1
1

Recientemente visto por ti

Por qué los estudiantes eligen Stuvia

Creado por compañeros estudiantes, verificado por reseñas

Calidad en la que puedes confiar: escrito por estudiantes que aprobaron y evaluado por otros que han usado estos resúmenes.

¿No estás satisfecho? Elige otro documento

¡No te preocupes! Puedes elegir directamente otro documento que se ajuste mejor a lo que buscas.

Paga como quieras, empieza a estudiar al instante

Sin suscripción, sin compromisos. Paga como estés acostumbrado con tarjeta de crédito y descarga tu documento PDF inmediatamente.

Student with book image

“Comprado, descargado y aprobado. Así de fácil puede ser.”

Alisha Student

Preguntas frecuentes