MIP CH 3: Managing Institutional Investor Portfolios Flashcards
Describe institutional investors
- Institutional investors are legal entities that ultimately serve as intermediaries between individuals and investment markets
- Examples include:
- DB/DC plans
- Foundations and Endowments
- Life and Non-Life Insurance Companies
- Banks
State some of the key differences between DB and DC pension plans.
- A DC plan has no financial liability; a DB plan does
- DC plan participants bear the investment risk; the plan sponsor bears this risk for DB plans
- The contributions and investment returns legally belong to the DC plan participant
- DC retirement assets are more portable (subject to vesting and tax penalties)
Describe foundations vs. endowments.
- Foundations are grant-making institutions funded by gifts and investment income
- Foundations are usually funded by a single donor
- Endowments are long-term funds owned by nonprofit institutions like universities and hospitals
- Endowments are usually funded by many people over time
State the objectives in managing securities portfolios
- Manage overall risk of the balance sheet
- Manage liquidity
- Produce income
- Manage credit risk (substantial credit risk is already in the loan portfolio)
- To meet other needs (e.g. regulatory constraints)
How is net interest margin calculated?
- Net interest margin equals interest income minus interest expense, divided by average earning assets
- Or, equivalently, net interest margin is the ratio of net interest income to invested assets
How is the leverage-adjusted duration gap calculated?
DA - kDL
k = L/A
Describe the impact from interest rate changes for a company with a positive
leverage-adjusted duration gap
If interest rates fall, the company will have a gain (assets increase more than liabilities)
What are the principal investment issues for DC plans?
-
Diversification
- ERISA requires at least three options and granting the participant rights to move between the options at least quarterly
-
Company stock
- Should be limited to ensure diversification
Describe cash balance pension plans.
- Sponsor bears the investment risk
- Looks like a DC plan to the participant (account balance, contribution credit, earnings credit)
- Contribution credit is percentage of pay based on age
- Earnings credit tied to long-term interest rates
- Usually from converted DB plans; the conversion often hurts older workers with many years of service
Describe Employee Stock Ownership Plan (ESOP) pension plans.
- Much of the plan assets are invested in employee stock
- The contribution is usually a percentage of the employee pay
- Some sell the stock at a discount
- Some allow employee contribution, while others prohibit it
- A problem occurs if the company fails because the participant may lose their job and much of their retirement savings at the same time
State the four main types of foundations.
- Independent (funded by individual donor and usually requiring payouts of at least 5% annually; this is the dominant type of foundation)
- Company sponsored (usually short-term focus)
- Operating (income to support specific programs)
- Community (fund a variety of grants)