Instos Flashcards
Name the 5 types of institutional investos
Banks Insurance Pension Plans Soverign Wealth Funds Endowments
5 common charecteristics of insto investors
Big Size Long time horizon Special regulatory framework Defined governance structure Potential principal agent conflicts
What are some examples of sections on an insto IPS
Objectives Constraints Asset allocation (SAA) Rebalancing policies External constraints (tax)
what are the 4 types of institutional allocation models
Yale, Norway, Canadian, Liability Driven
Discuss (explain, adv disadv) the Yale model of asset allocation
The Yale model entails a high level of active portfolio management with a significant portion invested in alternative investments. The alternative investment management is outsources to Franklin Templeton.
Adv - potential to outperform
Dis adv - more costly, CAPACITY ISSUES FOR EXTERNAL INVESTMENT MANAGERS
Discuss (explain, adv disadv) the Norway model
60/40 passive portfolio.
Adv - low tracking error, low costs
Disadv - no ability to outperform
Discuss (explain, adv disadv) the Canadian model
The Same as the Yale model - high alts, active management BUT KEEPING THE INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT IN HOUSE(Like AUSTRALIAN SUPER WOULD HAVE A PRIVATE EQUITY ARM)
Adv - ability to outperform
Disadv - costly
Explain a defined benefit plan, and how they can be over/under funded
It is a plan teachers etc. ussually get. Employees get paid an amount until death after thier time as an employee, ussually a % of thier final salary
It is the present Value of the assets (Like FAARB) - Present value of thier obligations
Explain what an active and retired lives are
Active lives are employees still currently employed and are accumulating benefits to be paid later.
Retired lives are the people who are getting paid by the company
Lets assume i am managing a pension plan - if there are more retired lives than active lives - what does that mean for my risk tolerance
Since there are more people recieving benefits, you would have a low risk tolerance - and be investing in lower risk securities. You’d also want more liquidity
If the funded status of the plan is high (PV assets higher than liability), what does that mean for the risk tolerance of the fund
You can take more risk
Let’s imagine that i work at BHP - and the pension plan invests mostly in coal and gas securities - what does this mean for the risk tolerance of my pension plan
Since the plan’s assets are closely correlated with the operating profits of the firm, if the industry went down bad - the fund would go down in value, and the firm might not have the operational capability to make the payments they are obligated to to beneficiaries - you’d wanna invest in lower risk things
What would a provision for early retirement in a pension plan do to the risk tolerance of a pension fund
Reduce it - early retirement means more liquidity needs
How does active v retired lives effect liquidity needs of a pension plan
More retired lives means more need for liquidity.`
Name the 5 types of Soverign wealth plans
Budget Fund Development Ssavings Reserve Pension