FINANCIAL INVESTMENTS Faculty:Bernard DUMAS

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FINANCIAL INVESTMENTS Faculty:Bernard DUMAS

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Loans. Savings = Investments. 10/24/09. Introduction. 6. Sources of financing ... Peter Lynch quote: 'One way is to tell yourself, I want to have 8% in autos, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: FINANCIAL INVESTMENTS Faculty:Bernard DUMAS


1
Université de Lausanne Master of Science Spring
2008
  • FINANCIAL INVESTMENTSFaculty Bernard DUMAS
  • Introduction The Role of Financial Markets. The
    Role of the Asset Management Industry
  • session 1-1

2
Overview
  • The roles of financial markets
  • The role of primary markets sources of financing
    for firms
  • Secondary markets
  • The organization of exchanges
  • The quality of stock prices information
    efficiency
  • What is Asset Management?
  • Two approaches to Asset Management
  • How you measure performance
  • About the market efficiency doctrine
  • Course calendar

3
The roles of financial markets
  • Primary markets
  • new issues of securities by firms
  • Provide financing
  • Pooling of funds permits financing of very large
    firms
  • Secondary markets
  • risks are tradable on a daily basis in the
    secondary markets
  • Households can maintain diversified portfolios
  • diversification of risks
  • pooling of risks. Example pensions
  • Financial markets indicate a price every day
    (secondary market)
  • The price reflects/aggregates the bits of
    information collected by all investors. Useful
    for corporate decision makers their role is to
    maximize that price

4
The role of primary markets
5
The financing role of financial markets
Investment banks
Households
Non financial assets (tangible and intangible )
Stocks, bonds and other financial markets
Firms
Loans
Commercial banks
Asset management firms
Savings Investments
6
Sources of financing for firms
Source Corbett, J. and T. Jenkinson, 1997, How
is Investment Financed? A Study of Germany,
Japan, the United Kingdom and the United States,
Manchester School, 65, pp. 69-93. And private
communication with Tim Jenkinson, Oxford
University.
7
Evolutions
Private communication with Tim Jenkinson, Oxford
University.
8
Evolutions (2)
9
Secondary markets
10
The organization of exchanges
  • Auction markets order driven markets
  • All orders are channeled through auctioneer or
    specialist
  • Orders are posted (the book)
  • Market clearing price
  • Note in effect the specialist is a dealer
  • Example NYSE, Euronext
  • Members form a partnership

11
The organization of exchanges
  • Dealer markets price-driven markets
  • Dealer trade on their own account, posting bid
    and ask prices
  • Market is more fragmented
  • Following scandal, regulation has forced
    comparative posting of quotes
  • Example NASDAQ, EASDAQ etc.

12
The quality of stock prices information
efficiency of markets
13
Market efficiency
  • Definition
  • A market is efficient relative to a given set of
    information if that set of information is
    rationally incorporated into stock prices
  • Price is present discounted value of expected
    future cash flows
  • Implications
  • Prices should not be predictable
  • Prices should be less volatile than cash flows

14
The volatility of stock prices
  • Robert Shiller (1981)
  • Actual stock price behavior compared to present
    discounted value of dividends
  • Stock prices are too volatile to be justified
    by subsequent dividends

15
Is the stock market a sideshow?
  • I shall show you later that it is connected to
    the business cycle
  • Right now, let me show that it is probably
    connected to pension assets and demographics

16
Dependency ratio
Source Arnott and Cascells
17
Consequence for the stock market
  • Conclusion in the years ahead, almost surely,
    expected returns will be lower than they have
    been
  • There could even be a stock market crash in 2012
    (when I retire)

18
Scary picture
Source J. Poterba, 2004, The Impact of
Population Aging on Financial Markets, NBER,
working paper 10851.
19
What is Asset Management?
20
What is Asset Management?
  • Asset management firms sell a service
  • They manage mutual funds short horizon, no
    liabilities, performance measured relative to a
    benchmark
  • Passive pure market-index risk
  • Active
  • Varying amount of trading act on signals
  • Varying degree of specialization or tilt value
    vs. growth
  • They manage pension fund assets long horizon/
    liabilities
  • They manage hedge funds short horizon,
    long/short, absolute performance
  • They manage endowments longer horizon,
    liabilities
  • Advisors (sub-management) vs. consultants
  • Banks and Insurance companies
  • They manage their own assets and client assets.
  • They have liabilities
  • Private banks asset management client services

21
What is asset management?
The fi-nancial market
  • Institutionals
  • Mutual funds
  • Pension funds
  • Insurance companies
  • Endowments

Passive investing (index funds)
Retail
Alter-na-tive in-vestmen-ts
Active investing (hedge funds or tilted funds)
HNW
(private bankers)
22
What is Asset Management?
  • Three markets
  • Retail market
  • Mostly reached by mutual funds, many of them
    offered by commercial banks
  • And (truly) Independent Financial Advisors
  • Institutional clients (themselves intermediaries,
    not final clients)
  • pension funds
  • other mutual funds (or funds of funds)
  • Insurance companies
  • Private banks
  • High net worth individuals
  • Mostly reached by private bankers
  • And family offices

23
What is Asset Management? Marketing
  • Pricing management and other fees
  • Mostly function of AuM
  • Sometimes based on performance
  • Distribution network
  • Direct mostly bank branches
  • In Continental Europe, commercial bank
    distribution entails an extremely heavy cost.
    Actual management fee is a small fraction of fee
    paid by final customer.
  • Third party mostly independent financial
    advisors and brokers
  • Varying degrees of open architecture
  • Packaging Can one separate manufacturing from
    distribution?
  • Not when asset management services are bundled
    with other financial services
  • In principle, it would be beneficial to separate
    the two
  • Alpha transport

24
Two approaches to asset management
25
Two approaches to asset management
  • Securities analysis Bottom up
  • Stock picking, i.e. security selection based on
    analysis (also called research)
  • Asset allocation Top down
  • Choose allocation to asset classes
  • Strategic asset allocation
  • If clients risk/return preference is identical
    to the risk/return trade-off offered by the
    market hold the market portfolio
  • If various asset classes have returns in a
    risk/return trade-off/pattern that differs from
    clients preferences (because of his/her investor
    characteristics, see above) hold a tilted
    portfolio

26
The top-down vs. bottom-up approaches to
equities investment
Peter Lynch quote One way is to tell yourself,
I want to have 8 in autos, because you have a
hunch that autos are going to do well. You can
close your eyes and throw darts at a list of auto
stocks, and buy a few. Another way is to analyze
each company on a case-by-case basis. In the
first instance, the 8 weighting in autos is
deliberate and the choice of companies is
incidental in the second, the choice of
companies is deliberate and the weighting is
incidental.
27
What is an asset class?
  • Bewildering array of investment opportunities
  • Classify assets into a few asset classes. On what
    basis?
  • By nature of asset? Stocks, bonds, industry etc..
  • The risks that assets are exposed to
  • Price risk
  • Country
  • Industry
  • Interest rate risk
  • Credit risk
  • Tail risk or risk of ruin
  • ?Most important classification device
  • Statistical correlation
  • Modeled as common factors and exposures thereto
  • quasi-arbitrage opportunities (convergence
    trades) LTCM
  • Pitfalls of correlations they move over time

28
How you measure performance
29
The tyranny of the benchmarks
  • Overall (stock?) market benchmark
  • CAPM theoretical support
  • In practice, mostly used for passive or active
    stock funds
  • Different benchmarks for different investment
    strategies?
  • Growth vs. value stocks classified by
    Book/Market ratio
  • Value outperforms growth most of the time
  • Episodes during which it is the opposite
  • Large-caps vs. small caps classified by log of
    Market cap.
  • Small caps outperform large caps most of the time
  • Episodes during which it is the opposite
  • Depends on technology cycle ?
  • Industry indexes, Country indexes, Bond indexes
    etc..
  • The choice of the benchmark is a large part of an
    asset management firms investment-philosophy
    definition

30
Risk management/Performance measurement
  • Risk management is the process of measuring
    exposures to various dimensions of risk,
  • to the benchmark in particular
  • The benchmark(s) serves simultaneously
  • to estimate risk exposures (pure statistical
    step)
  • and to measure performance (asset-pricing step)
  • (link if risk exposures were all reduced to
    zero, the return of a portfolio should be the
    riskless rate)

31
Do we need benchmarks?
  • Industry trend towards less emphasis on
    benchmarks
  • What is truly important for asset allocation is
    return on assets compared to
  • Client needs Ultimate benchmark should be the
    satisfaction of client spending needs
  • Risks of changes in the value of liabilities
  • Does the concept of absolute return abolish
    benchmarks?
  • Long/short investing permits hedging (elimination
    of exposures to common factors)
  • In that case, any return above interest rate
    (absolute return) is pure value added (alpha)

32
About the market efficiency doctrine
33
Is Asset Management Useful?
  • The proportion of mutual funds beating their
    benchmark is lower than 50 and falling
  • Coval et al. reading indicates, however, that a
    few individuals are successful investors
  • Is there room for asset management services in an
    efficient market?
  • Or should everyone just hold an index (i.e.,
    passive) fund?

34
About the market efficiency doctrine
  • Dont view market efficiency as an all-or-nothing
    proposition. The market is (or is not) efficient
    relative to a particular bit of information
  • The markets need people who gather/process
    information
  • If the market were fully efficient relative to
    all forms of information, there would be no
    incentive to go out and gather information
  • In equilibrium, even if everyone is rational,
    some level of inefficiency must exist in
    financial markets. The inefficiency is needed to
    pay the information gatherers.
  • Like in any line of business, there is
    competition you can turn out to be better or
    worse than others in gathering and processing
    information
  • In this business, however, competition is
    becoming worldwide (as opposed to local)

35
About the market efficiency doctrine
  • In addition, there is evidence of irrational
    behavior on the part of the general public
  • One more form of inefficiency
  • This opens trading opportunities for professional
    traders
  • This shows that the general public needs advice
  • For asset management to be successful, there has
    to exist some form of market inefficiency
  • The job of asset managers is to detect the
    patterns of market inefficiency that can be
    exploited
  • This will result,
  • in the short run, in superior performance and,
  • in the long run, in a larger amount of assets
    under management
  • One goal of this course is to categorize the
    inefficiencies

36
Conclusion
  • What you will have learnt by the time you finish
    this class
  • Who makes decisions about capital allocation in
    the financial market individual investors,
    investment banks, private banks, hedge funds,
    pension funds etc.
  • How they make these decisions
  • How their performance is measured
  • How they manage the level of risk they take

37
Course calendar
38
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