Chapter 17: Performance Measurement 2 Flashcards
State the aim of portfolio risk and return analysis
List the steps in portfolio risk and return
Aim
- To assess whether superior performance has been obtained simply by taking more risk or by superior stock and sector selection and tiing
Steps
- Plot overall TWRR from portfolio over period against riskiness of portfolio
- Compare portfolio to bechmark/peer group/simulated portfolios
- Riskiness measured by looking at standard deviation of returns over historical sub periods or implied volatilities
List three potential problems with portfolio risk and return analysis
- Creeping change portfolio compoisition - riskiness of portfolio may change gradually, but significantly, over time
- Successful investment manager ay be treated unfairly by measurement syste eg if skilled at selecting high risk stocks
- manager may disagree with market view of stok’s or market’s prospects and/or uncertainity attached to those prospects
List three advantages and four disadvantages of assess the performance of a share using its market price
Advantages
- Objective
- Generally quick, cheap and easy to obtain
- Easy to understand/justify
Disadvantages
- Subject to short term fluctuations, so volatile
- need to allow for income
- unavailable for unquoted shares
- may be more than one quoted figure, eg bid price and offer price
List three advantages and four disadvantages of assessing the performance of a share using its net present value
Advantages
- Can be made consistent with basis used to value liabilities
- useful for unquoted shares
- yields stable results
Disadvantages
- Depends on subjective assumptions
- results will reflect any changes in assumptions
- differs from actual market price, at which shares actually traded
- difficult to understand
List three advantages and five disadvantages of assessing the performance of a share using its NAV per share
Advantages
- Yields stable results
- available for unquoted shares
- useful for investment and property companies
Disadvatages
- Based on accounting values, not true, economic values
- depends on subjective accounting standards
- results will reflect any changes in accounting standards
- may exclude intabibles/goodwill
- difficult to compare companies in different sectors
State the formula used to calculate the risk adjusted return on capital (RAROC) for a company
How the return is estimated in the RAROC formula and explain what the formula tells you
The risk adjsuted return on capital calculated as
RAROC = R - ß(Rm - rf)
Where R is return achieved by compnay, ß reflects systemic risk of irs projects, Rm is market return and rf the risk free return of return
- Return as profits divided by capital employed to generate those profits
- If RAROC > rf company has out performed after allowing for cost adn risk involved in using its cpaital to generate its profits
Give three reasons why the risk adjusted return on capital (bbbRAROC)
- .Difficult to accutely estimate beta of the company
- Difficult to estimate company profits, as soem accounting costs (eg depreciation) need to be subjectively adjusted to reflect cost using the company’s assets
- Also, costs not associated with using or maintaining existing capital should be excluded rom profit calculation
- Difficult to accuragely estimate capital employed within business to generate profits - in particular, vlaues of any intabgibles