Chp 20-24 Flashcards

1
Q

1) Characteristics of property

A

Nature of return – real asset, provide real returns
Obsolescence - buildings deteriorate and renovation needed
Running yield – yield is between bonds and equities
Marketability – very unmarketable, takes very long to sell a property and dealing costs are high

Valuation – subjective, no central market with quoted property prices
Expected return – less marketable and less secure than bonds, hence demand a higher return vs. bonds
Government intervention – rent & planning controls, due to political significance of property

Capital values – volatile over LT, less volatile in ST - infrequent valuations and stable valuation methods)
Cashflow pattern – rent may be upward only
Risk – security depends on quality of tenant, risk of void

Unit size – large, single properties indivisible
Uniqueness – each property is unique

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2
Q

2) Investment and risk characteristics of property (Acronym – SYSTEMT)

A

Security (risk) – depends largely on quality of the tenant, capital values can be volatile over long-term but infrequent valuations and stable valuation methods reduce short-term volatility, property susceptible to government intervention such as rent and planning controls, less secure than bonds
Yield (real or nominal, running yield, expected return, compare with other assets) – Property is real asset and provides hedge against inflation, yield between conventional bonds and equities
Spread (diversification, volatility)
Term – generally long-term
Exchange rate/expenses/economic conditions/expertise required – FX matters for international property investment, maintenance expenses generally high
Marketability – Property is very unmarketable, less marketable than bonds
Tax

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3
Q

4) Definitions of freehold and leasehold property and the differences between them as investments

A

a) Freehold – ownership is in perpetuity, right to occupy or let out, subject to planning and rental controls
b) Leasehold – Temporary ownership, building reverts back to owner at expiry of lease

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4
Q

5) Descriptions of property unit trusts and property shares

A

a) Property unit trusts
i) Open-ended unitized funds
ii) Close-ended investment trusts
iii) How they differ – restriction on property type, limits on liquidity, management charges deductable
b) Property shares – wider investment choice, no restriction on investments or management expenses, can invest in property developments (riskier)

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5
Q

b) Advantages of direct property / disadvantages of indirect property

A

Diversification – less for property shares as they are affected by movements in equity market
Volatility – direct property less volatile
Control – no control with property shares
Loss on forced sale – sale by property investment manager
Exposure – property developments (not sales) are riskier

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6
Q

c) Other factors affecting choice re property investment types

A

Financial gearing (= debt/equity)
Discount to NAV – property shares can stand at discount to NAV and may be purchased cheaply
Taxation treatment – depends on territory

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7
Q

7) Definitions of futures, forwards, long and short positions, call option, put option, option writer, options price, strike price, European and American options and a warrant

A

a) Futures are standardized and traded on exchange
b) Long means exposure to asset, short means negative exposure to asset
c) Warrant is option issued by company over its own shares
d) American option can be exercised on any date, European option can only be exercised on expiry

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8
Q

7) Definitions of futures, forwards, long and short positions, call option, put option, option writer, options price, strike price, European and American options and a warrant

A

a) Futures are standardized and traded on exchange
b) Long means exposure to asset, short means negative exposure to asset
c) Warrant is option issued by company over its own shares
d) American option can be exercised on any date, European option can only be exercised on expiry

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9
Q

8) Definitions and descriptions of investment trust company, unit trust and open-ended investment company
a) Open-ended unit trust

A

i) Managers can create or cancel units as new money invested or disinvested
ii) Trust in a legal sense and not subject to company law
iii) Has stated investment objective
iv) Units priced at NAV
v) Limited borrowing power
vi) Has trustees – often bank or insurance company, ensures that managers obey Trust Deed and to hold assets in trust for the unit holders

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10
Q

8) Definitions and descriptions of investment trust company, unit trust and open-ended investment company
b) Close-ended investment company

A

i) Fund closed to new money after initial tranche of investment
ii) Works like a public company
(1) Can raise both loan and equity capital
(2) Has shares and can be traded on stock exchange
(3) Has board of directors
(4) Have a stated investment objective

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11
Q

8) Definitions and descriptions of investment trust company, unit trust and open-ended investment company
c) Open-ended investment companies

A

i) Cross between investment trust and unit trust
ii) Like open-ended unit trust – units priced at NAV, open-ended
iii) Governed by company rather than trust law

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12
Q

9) Differences between close-ended investment companies and open-ended unit trusts

A

Marketability – marketability on close-ended funds often less than the underlying assets, marketability of units in open-ended fund is guaranteed by managers
Gearing – of close-ended funds can make shares more volatile than underlying equity, most open-ended funds cannot be geared
Size of Discount to NAV – this can change in close-ended funds making it more volatile
Increased volatility of close-ended funds mean they should provide higher return
NAV per share of close-ended funds uncertain, especially if investments unquoted
Management charges higher for open-ended funds than close-ended funds
Close-ended funds provide wider range of assets to invest than unit trusts
Can purchase assets at discount to NAV in close-ended funds
Tax rates differ

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13
Q

10) Advantages of collective investment schemes

A
Cost of direct investment avoided
Advantage with marketability
Track return on specific index
Divisibility
Advantage regarding tax
Diversification
Specialist expertise
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14
Q

10) Disadvantages of collective investment schemes

A

Loss of control
Tax disadvantages – e.g. withholding tax
Management charges

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15
Q

12) Three main reasons for investing overseas

A

Match liabilities in foreign currency
Increase expected returns
Diversification

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16
Q

13) Problems of investing overseas

A

Mismatching
Tax
Volatility of currency

Custodians needed
Additional admin required
Time delays
Expenses incurred/expertise needed
Regulation poorer
Political problems
Information poorer
Language difficulties
Liquidity poorer
Accounting differences
Restrictions on ownership of assets/repatriation problems
17
Q

14) How to assess the investment and risk characteristics of overseas investment

A

Volatility
Taxation
Currency movements
Risk of default

18
Q

15) Four ways of getting indirect overseas exposure and the advantages and disadvantages of each

A

a) Multinational companies based in home market
i) Advantages: Easy to deal with home market, companies have expertise, conduct business in most profitable areas overseas, areas where direct investment may be difficult
ii) Disadvantages: Earnings are diluted by domestic earnings, lack of control
b) Investment in companies with substantial export trade
c) Investment in collective investment schemes specializing in overseas investment
d) Investment in derivatives based on overseas assets

19
Q

18) Factors to consider before investing in emerging markets

A

Current market valuation
Availability and quality of information
Language barriers
Marketability (level)

High economic growth rate (possibility)
Available companies
Regulation (market)
Political stability

Foreign investment restrictions
Currency stability and strength

20
Q

1) Economic influences on

a) Short-term interest rates

A

controlled by government through central bank’s intervention in the money market in order to meet its policy objectives, using the supply of treasury bonds and repo-rate to influence the money market

21
Q

1) Economic influences on

b) Bond yields

A

Fiscal deficit – If fiscal deficit is funded by borrowing, greater supply of bonds will put upward pressure on bond yields since increased supply will reduce bond prices
Inflation – erodes real value of income and capital payments on fixed coupon bonds.
Short-term interest rates – reduction in short-term bond yields will increase bond prices, but yield on long bonds may increase as cut in interest rates can be interpreted as a sign of monetary easing with potentially inflationary consequences over the longer term
The exchange rate – Changes in expectations of future movement in currency will affect demand from overseas investors.

Other economic factors – any factors that have influence on the above FIST factors
Institutional cashflows – e.g. large institutional cashflow will give rise to demand for bonds

22
Q

1) Economic influences on

c) Equity prices

A

i) Expectations regarding future corporate profitability and value of those profits (e.g. dividends)
ii) Expectations of real interest rates and inflation – high interest rate and inflation are unfavourable for strong economic growth, low interest rate stimulate economic activity and increase level of corporate profitability, the more uncertain the inflation equity demand will increase relative to bonds
iii) Perception of riskiness of equity market
iv) Real level of economic growth in the economy
v) FX for export dominated companies

23
Q

1) Economic influences on

d) Property prices

A

i) Economic growth – increases demand for commercial and industrial property
ii) Real interest rate – affect occupational demand for property as drop in real interest rate stimulates economic growth, higher interest rate means lower present value of cashflows
iii) Supply side lags and property development cycle
iv) Statutory control – e.g. restrictions on development
v) Periodic change in price – due to fixed and periodic rental reviews
vi) International demand for property, exchange rates

24
Q

2) Other factors affecting demand for different asset classes

A

a) External factors – investor’s income, investor’s preferences, price of other investment assets
b) Investor’s perception of characteristics of asset changes – risk and expected return
c) Institutional cashflows can force up prices in the target markets
d) Technological innovation

25
Q

3) Factors leading to change in investor preferences

A

a) Change in their liabilities
b) Change in regulatory or tax regimes
c) Uncertainty in the political climate
d) “Fashion” or sentiment altering
e) Marketing
f) Investor education undertaken by the suppliers of a particular asset class

26
Q

4) Description of various (general) valuation methods used to value individual investments (Acronym SHAM FADS)

A

Smoothed market value – average of market value over a specific period to remove daily fluctuations
Historic book value – price originally paid for the asset
Adjusted book value – book value written up or down for movements in value
Market value – price available from open market

Fair value – amount for which asset can be exchanged or liability settled between knowledgeable, willing parties at arms length
Arbitrage value – price of replicating portfolio
Discounted cashflow – discounting expected future cashflows with suitable discount rate
Stochastic models – extension of discounted cashflow with future cashflows and/or interest rates treated as random variables

27
Q

5) Description of various methods specific to the valuation of

A

a) Bonds – discounted cashflow approach with higher yield for corporate bonds
b) Equities – discounting dividends, intrinsic value
c) Property – discounted cashflow approach
d) Options, futures – assuming ‘no arbitrage’
e) Swaps – discount two component cashflows, one at fixed and the other at variable interest rate

28
Q

6) Formulae for the discounted dividend model (both general and simplified versions), be able to prove V = D(i-g) results and state the assumptions

A

a) Assumptions:
i) Dividends payable annually
ii) Dividends grow at constant rate g per annum
iii) Flat yield curve
iv) Ignore tax

29
Q

7) Formulae for the required and expected return on an asset

A

a) General formulae – Required nominal return = required risk-free real yield + expected inflation + risk premium, Expected return = initial income yield + capital growth
b) Specific to bonds – GRY = required risk-free real yield + expected inflation + bond risk premium, where bond risk premium = inflation risk premium + default premium + marketability premium
c) Specific to equities – Required return from equities = d+ g, where d is the income stream and g the expected capital gain. Therefore d + g = required risk-free real yield + expected inflation + equity risk premium, where equity risk premium = default premium + marketability premium + volatility premium
d) Specific to property – rental yield + expected growth in rents = required risk-free real yield + expected inflation + property risk premium, where property risk premium = rent default premium + marketability premium + …

30
Q

8) Assumptions required for equating required and expected returns

A

a) All investors want a real return
b) All investors have the same time horizon for investment decisions
c) Tax differences between investors can be ignored
d) Reinvestment can occur at a rate equal to the expected total return on the asset

31
Q

9) How actual bond returns are affected by inflation and changes in gross redemption yields

A

a) As inflation increases, the real return from bond decreases

32
Q

10) Derivation of yield gap formulae

A

a) Equity/bond yield gap = equity gross dividend yield – gross redemption yield on a long-dated benchmark bond
b) Equity/property yield gap = property risk premium – equity risk premium + expected dividend growth – expected rental growth (i.e. property required return – equity required return)
c) Bond/property yield gap = rental yield - GRY
d) Reverse yield gap = -yield gap

33
Q

11) Description of other methods comparison methods

A

a) Yield norms – some asset categories have normal level or range of yields
b) Index levels and price charts – technical analysis used to compare value of asset groupings and individual assets
c) Yield ratios – relative price of equities and bonds

34
Q

12) Importance of consistency between the asset and liability valuation

A

a) If assets are valued at market value, then liabilities should be valued at appropriate market based discount rates, or alternatively both assets and liabilities could be valued using the same long-term interest rate

35
Q

13) Two sources of variability in asset prices

A

a) Volatility over a short period due to market movements

b) Due to change in investment portfolio (e.g. switch from government bonds to equities)

36
Q

14) Understanding as to whether the volatility of asset prices is a problem or not

A

a) Consistency overrides the problem of stability – use e.g. smoothed market value or discounted cashflow method using a long-term interest rate

37
Q

15) Description of notional portfolio valuation, its advantages and disadvantages – also make sure you can do the calculations

A

a) Notional portfolio is a portfolio reflecting the broad characteristics of the liability profile and a tool to smooth the results of the actuarial valuation over time
b) At the valuation date, it is assumed that the actual assets of the fund are sold at market value and reinvested in the notional portfolio
c) The discounted cashflow value of this notional portfolio is then taken as the market value of the assets
d) Using notional portfolio removes the problem of having to estimate future cashflows on each individual asset and reduces the amount of calculation required