Introduction to Active Portfolio Management - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 29
About This Presentation
Title:

Introduction to Active Portfolio Management

Description:

Introduction to Active Portfolio Management Equity Style Spectrum * * Deep Value Value GARP Index Growth Management Styles * * Traditionally: Fundamental An ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:121
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 30
Provided by: yorkuCaps
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Introduction to Active Portfolio Management


1
Introduction to ActivePortfolio Management
2
Equity Style Spectrum
Growth
Index
GARP
Value
Deep Value
3
Management Styles
  • Traditionally
  • Fundamental
  • An investment approach that relies on detailed
    company specific research to identify buy/sell
    candidates
  • Quantitative
  • An investment approach that relies on models
    (involving forecasting financial metrics using
    mathematical and statistical techniques) to
    identify buy/sell candidates

4
Decision Making Process Fundamental vs.
Quantitative
  • Fundamental
  • Decisions based on human judgement
  • Applied depth and breath of knowledge to a narrow
    set of investment opportunities
  • Company visits may be important in the investment
    process
  • Intellectual capital of managers very important
  • Portfolio results less easily back-tested and
    replicated
  • Hard to test the investment strategy because it
    cannot be quantified

5
Decision Making Process Discretionary vs
Quantitative
  • Quantitative
  • Based on objective rules Relationship between
    inputs (fundamental or technical/statistical
    factors) and expected return are formalized in a
    model
  • Applied narrow set of information to broad set of
    investment opportunities
  • More easily back-tested and replicated (if you
    know the model)
  • Intellectual capital of managers less important

6
Overall Process
7
Investment Process
  • Investment universe
  • Dictated by strategy mandate. Examples U.S.
    small cap., global value, international growth
  • Focus list
  • Narrow down the universe and perform in-depth
    research on stocks on the focus list
  • Portfolio construction
  • Optimal weight of each stock in the final
    portfolio, risk management

8
Discretionary Managers
  • Team-based majority voting Approach
  • Fundamental research
  • Active corporate interview program

9
Quantitative Managers
  • Example LSV Asset Management
  • Use both statistical and fundamental inputs
  • Management process see handout

10
Basic Investment Strategies
  • Top-down
  • Bottom-up
  • Value
  • Growth
  • GARP
  • Market cap
  • International

11
Top-down Strategy
  • Start with forecast of the economy GDP growth,
    interest rates, exchange rates, capital flows,
    employment growth.etc.
  • Then select industries that will prosper in the
    forecasted economic environment
  • Then select companies in the chosen industries,
    based on financial analysis
  • Asset allocation funds are examples of top-down
    strategy
  • Portfolio weights of two (or more) asset classes
    vary over time, depending on market conditions

12
Bottom-up Strategy
  • Focus on the financial characteristics of
    individual companies
  • Start with preliminary screening based on
    financial analysis, e.g., dividend yield gt 2.5,
    P/B lt 2.5x, consistent sales growth .etc.
  • More in-depth company analysis of the stocks left
    in the universe after screening
  • Managers with a specific mandate, e.g., value,
    growth, incomeetc. tend to be bottom-up managers

13
Value Investing
  • Choosing companies for which analysis reveals
    unrecognized value
  • Company experienced profits and stock price
    decline
  • Stock underpriced by the market relative to its
    long-term fundamentals
  • Value stocks tend to have high dividend yield,
    low P/B, P/E, and P/cash flow

14
Value Investing
Investment decision
Long-term earnings potential?
Which?
Profits and stock price decline
Did investors over-react to short-term negative
events?
15
Value Investing (Contd)
  • Graham and Dodds 1934 classic, Security
    Analysis, published during the Great Depression
  • Warren Buffet was a student of Ben Graham at
    Columbia University
  • But old ratios no longer apply in todays market
    (e.g., P/B lt 2/3x). Multiples fluctuate (SP
    500s average is about 2x in 2012)
  • Value trap low price stock ? value stock
  • Momentum factor is important here

16
Value Investing
  • Discretionary/fundamental
  • For example, in The Warren Buffett Way by
    Hagstrom (2005)
  • Business tenets
  • Management tenets
  • Financial tenets (ROE, profit margin, debt
    etc.)
  • Value tenets (PV of cash flow)
  • Quantitative
  • LSV (uses both fundamental and statistical inputs)

17
Growth Investing
  • Picking companies that are considered to have
    above average growth prospects
  • Higher than average valuation (P/B, P/E, P/cash
    flow)
  • Stock expected to generate above-average sales
    and earnings growth relative to its industry, or
    the overall market
  • Growth stocks usually pay little or no dividend,
    excess cash used to finance expansion
  • Investors expect superior rate of stock price
    appreciation, rather than dividend yield

18
Value vs Growth
  • Historically, value tends to outperform growth
  • Positive value premium over the long term

19
Time-series
20
Growth vs Value
21
Value vs. Growth
22
Style Cycles and Geography
23
GARP
  • Growth at a reasonable price
  • Looking for growth but also reasonable valuation
  • Popularized by Peter Lynch of Fidelitys Magellan
    Fund (1977-1990)
  • PEG ratio ? 1

24
Blend
  • Canadian stock market not large enough to have a
    deep value or uniquely high growth portfolio
  • Equity funds can be a blended fund (mix of value
    and growth stocks)

25
Market Cap
  • Specialize in a particular size
  • U.S. dollars (pre-2008 Q4)
  • Large cap gt 10 billion
  • Mid cap 2 - 10 billion
  • Small cap 300 million - 2 billion
  • Micro cap 50 - 300 million
  • Nano cap Under 50 million
  • Size premium preference for small-mid cap tilt?
    If passive, can pick a small-mid cap ETF
  • If active, may argue that this is the segment of
    the market where manager can exploit
    inefficiencies

26
International
  • Benchmarks EAFE (for developed markets), MSCI
    All Country World (for global markets)
  • Country selection weakening as a source of alpha
    and diversification
  • Economies and stock markets are increasingly
    globally integrated
  • New direction sector selection
  • Sector calls made independent of geography

27
Global sector ETFs
Examples 10 Global SectorsiShares SP Global
Materials Sector Index Fund (MXI) iShares SP
Global Consumers Staples Sector Index Fund (KXI)
iShares SP Global Consumer Discretionary Sector
Index Fund (RXI) iShares SP Global Energy
Sector Index Fund (IXC) iShares SP Global
Financials Sector Index Fund (IXG) iShares SP
Global Healthcare Sector Index Fund (IXJ)
iShares SP Global Industrials Sector Index Fund
(EXI) iShares SP Global Technology Sector Index
Fund (IXN) iShares SP Global Utilities Sector
Index Fund (JXI) iShares SP Global
Telecommunications Sector Index Fund (IXP)
28
Currency Overlay
  • Managing currency risk of international portfolio
    separately. Equity managers job not affected
  • Can be active currency bets, or passive hedge
  • To hedge or not to hedge

29
Impact of Currency
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com