Charles P' Jones, Investments: Analysis and Management,

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Charles P' Jones, Investments: Analysis and Management,

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Title: Charles P' Jones, Investments: Analysis and Management,


1
Indirect Investing
  • Chapter 3
  • Charles P. Jones, Investments Analysis and
    Management,
  • Ninth Edition, John Wiley Sons
  • Prepared by
  • G.D. Koppenhaver, Iowa State University
  • Additional Information by Axel Grossmann

2
Indirect Investing
  • Alternative to direct investment in or ownership
    of securities
  • Refers to buying and selling the shares of
    intermediaries (investment companies) that hold
    portfolios of securities
  • Investors are purchasing an ownership interest in
    that portfolio of securities
  • They are entitled to
  • Pro rate share of dividends, interest, and
    capital gains
  • Shareholders also pay expenses

3
Investment Companies
  • Financial firm that sells shares to the public
    and uses the proceeds to invest in marketable
    securities
  • Acts as conduit for distribution of dividends,
    interest, and realized gains
  • Can elect to pay no federal taxes on
    distributions
  • Shareholders pay tax as if they own securities
    directly
  • Offers professional management, diversification
  • Not insured or guaranteed
  • Required to register with the SEC

4
Company Types
  • Unit investment trusts (UIT)
  • Put together by a sponsor and handled by an
    independent trustee
  • Typically holds an unmanaged, fixed-income
    portfolio
  • Assets not actively traded once purchased
  • Trust ceases to exist when securities mature
  • Passive investment
  • At cheap price

5
Company Types
  • Closed-end investment companies
  • (Closed-end Funds)
  • No additional shares sold after initial public
    offering
  • Capitalization is fixed (closed-end)
  • Traded like any other stock
  • Share prices determined by supply and demand in
    the secondary market
  • Price may not equal Net Asset Value of the shares
  • Net Asset Value Total market value of the
    security portfolio divided by total shares

6
Company Types
  • Open-end investment companies
  • (Mutual Funds)
  • Shares continue to be sold to the public at NAV
    after initial sale that capitalizes the company
  • Shares may be sold back to company at NAV
  • Company size constantly changes (open-ended)
  • Most popular form of investment company
  • Two thirds of all mutual funds require 1,000 or
    less as minimum investment

7
Company Types
  • Open-end investment companies
  • Mutual funds are corporations or business trusts
  • Formed by an investment advisory firm (IAF)
  • IAF selects a board of trustees (directors)
  • Trustees hire management company, which manages
    the fund (usually IAF)

8
Mutual Fund Categories (see page 60)
  • Money market mutual funds (MMFs)
  • Less risk
  • Less expected return
  • Invest in portfolio of money market securities
  • Taxable money market funds
  • Treasury Bills
  • Negotiable CDs
  • Commercial papers
  • etc
  • Tax-exempt money market funds
  • Short-term municipal secuirties
  • State tax-exempt MMFs

9
Mutual Fund Categories
  • Average maturity 1 to 2 month
  • Regulation limit 90 days
  • Investors pay a management fee but not a sales or
    redemption charge (load)
  • Interest is earned and credited daily
  • Usually no capital gains and losses
  • Not insured by the federal government

10
Mutual Fund Categories
  • Equity, bond, and income mutual funds
  • More risk
  • More expected return
  • invest in portfolio of securities consistent with
    the objectives of the fund
  • Objectives set by the companys board
  • Disclosure of objectives to investors
  • 18 major categories of investment objectives

11
Mutual Fund Categories
  • Equity, bond, and income mutual funds
  • Some Objectives
  • Only capital gains (equity)
  • Capital gains and income (equity with dividends)
  • International companies
  • Mix of equity, fixed-income and derivatives
  • Taxable bonds
  • Corporate, global, government bond funds
  • Tax-free bonds
  • State municipal, national municipal bond funds

12
Equity Funds
  • Other categories
  • Large cap, mid cap, small cap, value and growth.
  • Most equity funds are either
  • Value funds, which invest in undervalued stocks
    as determined by fundamental financial analysis
  • Growth funds, which invest in stocks of firms
    expected to show future rapid earnings growth

13
Equity Funds
https//flagship.vanguard.com/VGApp/hnw/FundsStock
sOverview
14
Cost Considerations
  • Closed-end fund
  • prices may be at a discount or premium to NAV
  • NAV gt market price selling at discount
  • NAV lt market price selling at premium
  • On average closed-end funds sold at 11 discount
  • Reasons for premium/discount
  • Transaction cost
  • Future fund managers performance
  • Investor sentiment (Foreign Closed-end funds)

15
Cost Considerations
  • Mutual funds
  • Load funds (charge a sales fee)
  • Load charge goes to investment company or brokers
  • Depending on the class
  • charge a front-end fee (load) to cover the costs
    of selling the fund to investors (around 5)
  • a redemption (back-end) fee
  • distribution fee (called 12b-1 fee)
  • management fee
  • All fees must be stated in the mutual fund
    prospectus

16
Cost Considerations
  • distribution fee (called 12b-1 fee)
  • Imposed by half of all funds
  • Covers distribution, marketing and advertising
    expenses
  • Existing shareholders benefit if new shareholders
    are attracted (spreading overhead)

17
Cost Considerations
  • Classes of shares
  • Class A
  • Front-end fee (sales load)
  • Maybe small annual distribution fee
  • Class B
  • Annual distribution fee (around 1)
  • Back-end fee (redemption fee)
  • Declines and disappears over time (5 to 6 years)
  • Convertible into class A shares

18
Cost Considerations
  • Class C
  • Like class B but not convertible into class A
    shares
  • Distribution fee is not reduced and continues on
    and on.
  • Load funds
  • See example 3-12 page 68

19
Cost Considerations
  • On a 1,000 purchase of a class A load mutual
    fund, with a 5.2 load fee, an investor would pay
    52 commission, acquiring only 948 in shares.
  • On a 1,000 purchase of a class B load mutual
    fund, an investor would acquire 1,000 in shares.
  • The sales charge is simply being deferred

20
Cost Considerations
  • No-load funds
  • Purchased at NAV directly from the investment
    company
  • No sales force expense to cover
  • no sales fee, no redemption fee, no distribution
    fee
  • Investors must seek out funds
  • How is investment company compensated
  • An annual operating expense paid out of fund
    income

21
Performance
  • Reported on a regular basis in the popular press
  • Measured over a given time period as a percent of
    initial investment
  • Total returns include reinvested dividends and
    capital gains
  • Average annual return reflects the mean compound
    growth rate of investment over a given time period

22
Performance
  • Example

23
Performance
  • Benchmarks
  • E.g. SP500
  • Importance of Expenses
  • Class B share with 4.77 annual return, expense
    ratio 2.17
  • Net return only 2.6
  • Consistency of Performance
  • Does past performance matter?
  • Only few managed mutual funds beat the market
  • Index Funds (passive funds)
  • Replicate the market (e.g. SP500)
  • Lower expenses unmanaged

24
International Funds
  • Some mutual funds specialize in international
    securities
  • US investors can participate in emerging market
    economies
  • International funds or global funds emphasize
    international stocks
  • Single-country funds concentrate assets
  • Actively or passively managed

25
Exchange-Traded Funds
  • Basket of stocks that tracks the value of a
    sector, investment style, or market as a whole
  • Some characteristics of index mutual funds and
    closed-end funds
  • Passive in nature
  • Trades throughout the day on an exchange
  • ETFs can be sold and bought any time during the
    trading day (mutual funds are only priced once a
    day)
  • ETFs like stocks can be bought on margins and can
    be sold short
  • Lower operating expenses than mutual funds, but
    brokerage fees
  • Bond and equity indexes traded
  • Tax efficient control over capital gains
    distributions
  • http//www.vanguard.com/jumppage/vipers/

26
New Directions in Funds
  • Mutual fund supermarkets
  • Various mutual fund families can be purchased
    through a single source
  • Brokerage account may provide access
  • Supermarket managers earn fee
  • On-line investment services
  • Internet used to provide mutual fund information
    and make transactions
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