Chapter 20: Portfolio Management (1) Flashcards
Value managers
value managers specialise in managing portfolios of value stocks - stocks that appear good value in terms of certain accounting ratios, such as the forward earnings to price ratio or book to price ratio.
Growth managers
specialise in managing portfolios of growth stocks - broadly stocks that are expected to experience rapid growth of earnings and hence share price
List 5 Investment Styles
- Growth
- Value
- Momentum
- Contrarian
- Rotational
Momentum - Investment style
purchasing those stocks which have recently risen significantly in price on the belief that they will continue to rise owing to an upward shift in their demand curves, or vice versa for selling.
Contrarian - Investment style
doing just the opposite to what most other investors are doing in the market in the belief that investors tend to overreact to news.
Rotational - Investment style
moving between value and growth depending on which style is believed to be attractive at any particular point in time
Describe top-down approach: (3)
- the top-down approach to constructing and managing a portfolio involves a structured decision-making process that starts by considering the asset allocation at the highest level, i.e. between asset classes
- Within each asset class an analysis is then made of how to distribute the available fund between different sectors…
- and finally, the selection of the individual assets to purchase is made.
Describe bottom-up approach
a bottom-up approach seeks to identify the best value individual investments, irrespective of their geographical or sectoral spread
Asset allocation and stock selection may be based on these 3 methods: (3)
- Fundamental analysis
- Quantitative techniques
- Technical analysis
Describe: Passive investment managers
passive investment managers are, typically, index-trackers. they manage assets without taking active investment decisions.
Available approaches to index tracking (3)
- full replication
- sampling
- synthesizing the index using derivatives
Active investment managers
active investment managers apply various types of judgement to the selection of portfolios with the objective of out-performing a benchmark.
Two groups of active investment managers
- multi-asset (balanced) mandates
2. specialist mandates
Two types of active bond trading
- anomaly switches
2. policy switches
Anomaly switching
involves moving between stocks with similar volatilities, thereby taking advantage of temporary price anomalies