CFAI 7 - Derivados/ Investimentos alternativos Flashcards
•Which of the following is least likely to be considered an alternative investment?
A.Real estate
B.Commodities
C.Long-only equity funds
•C is correct. Long-only equity funds are typically considered traditional investments and real estate and commodities are typically classified as alternative investments.
•An investor is seeking an investment that can take long and short positions, may use multi-strategies, and historically exhibits low correlation with a traditional investment portfolio. The investor’s goals will be best satisfied with an investment in:
A.real estate.
B.a hedge fund.
C.a private equity fund.
•B is correct. Hedge funds may use a variety of strategies (event-driven, relative value, macro and equity hedge), generally have a low correlation with traditional investments, and may take long and short positions.
•Relative to traditional investments, alternative investments are least likely to be characterized by:
A.high levels of transparency.
B.limited historical return data.
C.significant restrictions on redemptions.
•A is correct. Alternative investments are characterized as typically having low levels of transparency.
•An investor is most likely to consider adding alternative investments to a traditional investment portfolio because:
A.of their historically higher returns.
B.of their historically lower standard deviation of returns.
C.their inclusion is expected to reduce the portfolio’s Sharpe ratio.
•A is correct. The historically higher returns to most categories of alternative investments compared with traditional investments result in potentially higher returns to a portfolio containing alternative investments. The less than perfect correlation with traditional investments results in portfolio risk (standard deviation) being less than the weighted average of the standard deviations of the investments. This has potential to increase the Sharpe ratio in spite of the historically higher standard deviation of returns of most categories of alternative investments.
•An investor may prefer a single hedge fund to a fund of funds if he seeks:
A.due diligence expertise.
B.better redemption terms.
C.a less complex fee structure.
•C is correct. Hedge funds of funds have multi-layered fee structures, while the fee structure for a single hedge fund is less complex. Funds of funds presumably have some expertise in conducting due diligence on hedge funds and may be able to negotiate more favorable redemption terms than could an individual investor in a single hedge fund.
•Hedge funds are similar to private equity funds in that both:
A.are typically structured as partnerships.
B.assess management fees based on assets under management.
C.do not earn an incentive fee until the initial investment is repaid.
•A is correct. Private equity funds and hedge funds are typically structured as partnerships where investors are limited partners (LP) and the fund is the general partner (GP). The management fee for private equity funds is based on committed capital whereas for hedge funds the management fees are based on assets under management. For most private equity funds, the general partner does not earn an incentive fee until the limited partners have received their initial investment back.
•An investor seeks a current income stream as a component of total return, and desires an investment that historically has low correlation with other asset classes. The investment most likely to achieve the investor’s goals is:
A.timberland.
B.collectibles.
C.commodities.
•A is correct. Timberland offers an income stream based on the sale of timber products as a component of total return and has historically generated returns not highly correlated with other asset classes.
•A hedge fund invests primarily in distressed debt. Quoted market prices are available for the underlying holdings but they trade infrequently. Which of the following will the hedge fund most likely use in calculating net asset value for trading purposes?
A.Average quotes
B.Average quotes adjusted for liquidity
C.Bid prices for short positions and ask prices for long positions
•B is correct. Many practitioners believe that liquidity discounts are necessary to reflect fair value. This has resulted in some funds having two NAVs - for trading and reporting. The fund may use average quotes for reporting purposes but apply liquidity discounts for trading purposes.
•Angel investing capital is typically provided in which stage of financing?
A.Later-stage.
B.Formative-stage.
C.Mezzanine-stage.
•B is correct. Formative-stage financing occurs when the company is still in the process of being formed and encompasses several financing steps. Angel investing capital is typically raised in this early stage of financing.
•If a commodity’s forward curve is in contango, the component of a commodities futures return most likely to reflect this is:
A.spot prices.
B.the roll yield.
C.the collateral yield.
•B is correct. Roll yield refers to the difference between the spot price of a commodity and the price specified by its futures contract (or the difference between two futures contracts with different expiration dates). When futures prices are higher than the spot price, the commodity forward curve is upward sloping, and the prices are referred to as being in contango. Contango occurs when there is little or no convenience yield.
•If a commodity’s forward curve is in contango, the component of a commodities futures return most likely to reflect this is:
A.spot prices.
B.the roll yield.
C.the collateral yield.
•B is correct. Roll yield refers to the difference between the spot price of a commodity and the price specified by its futures contract (or the difference between two futures contracts with different expiration dates). When futures prices are higher than the spot price, the commodity forward curve is upward sloping, and the prices are referred to as being in contango. Contango occurs when there is little or no convenience yield.
•United Capital is a hedge fund with $250 million of initial capital. United charges a 2% management fee based on assets under management at year end, and a 20% incentive fee based on returns in excess of an 8% hurdle rate. In its first year, United appreciates 16%. Assume management fees are calculated using end-of-period valuation. The investor’s net return assuming the performance fee is calculated net of the management fee is closest to:
A.11.58%.
B.12.54%.
C.12.80%.
•B is correct. The net investor return is 12.54%, calculated as:
End of year capital = $250 million × 1.16 = $290 million
Management fee = $290 million × 2% = $5.8 million
Hurdle amount = 8% of $250 million = $20 million;
Incentive fee = ($290 − $250 − $20 − $5.8) million × 20% = $2.84 million
Total fees to United Capital = ($5.8 + $2.84) million = $8.64 million
Investor net return: ($290 − $250 − $8.64) / $250 = 12.54%
•Capricorn Fund of Funds invests GBP 100 million in each of Alpha Hedge Fund and ABC Hedge Fund. Capricorn FOF has a “1 and 10” fee structure. Management fees and incentive fees are calculated independently at the end of each year. After one year, net of their respective management and incentive fees, the investment in Alpha is valued at GBP80 million and the investment in ABC is valued at GBP140 million. The annual return to an investor in Capricorn, net of fees assessed at the fund of funds level, is closest to:
A.7.9%.
B.8.0%.
C.8.1%.
•A is correct because the net investor return is 7.9%, calculated as:
First, note that “1 and 10” refers to a 1% management fee, and a 10% incentive fee.
End of year capital = GBP140 million + GBP80 million = GBP220 million
Management fee = GBP220 million × 1% = GBP2.2 million
Incentive fee = (GBP220 − GBP200) million × 10% = GBP2 million
Total fees to Capricorn = (GBP2.2 + GBP2) million = GBP4.2 million
Investor net return: (GBP220 − GBP200 − GBP4.2) / GBP200 = 7.9%
•An analyst wanting to assess the downside risk of an alternative investment is least likely to use the investment’s:
A.Sortino ratio.
B.value at risk (VaR).
C.standard deviation of returns.
•C is correct. Downside risk measures focus on the left side of the return distribution curve where losses occur. The standard deviation of returns assumes that returns are normally distributed. Many alternative investments do not exhibit close-to-normal distribution of returns, which is a crucial assumption for the validity of a standard deviation as a comprehensive risk measure. Assuming normal probability distributions when calculating these measures will lead to an underestimation of downside risk for a negatively skewed distribution. Both the Sortino ratio and the value-at-risk measure are both measures of downside risk.
Private equity strategies
LVBO
Venture capital
Distressed investments
Development Capital