Reading 31: Concentrated Single Asset Position Flashcards
Prepaid Variable Forward Equivalent
A prepaid variable forward is equivalent to hedging the risky asset with a collar (buying a put and selling a call) plus borrowing the value of the hedged position. Owner receives cash at initiation but retains upside if price increases because fewer shares will need to be delivered.
Monetisation
Decreasing non-systematic (or asset specific) risk, providing funds for portfolio objectives, and tax efficiency are common objectives in monetisation. Monetising is taking out leverage on the asset and the LVR can be maximised by using derivatives to hedge risk.
Single Asset Vs Diversified Portfolio
The median outcome is lower for the single asset portfolio, reflecting its higher probability of suffering a large or total loss. The single asset portfolio has a more extreme positive skew because of a higher average ending value reflecting the benefit of tax deferral (apposed to selling the single stock now with low cost basis and diversifying). Single stock has a much higher probability of a 100% loss. Average ending value looks better for single asset but when downside risk is considered the diversified portfolio is best.
Charity Giving of Real Estate
Donating assets to charity is typically tax free (the disposition of the asset is treated as a tax-free transaction), even if the assets have significant unrealized gains. In fact, the donation is likely to also result in a tax credit/deduction in the amount of the donation. The owner will lose control of the asset.
Exchange Fund
Involves numerous investors (each with a concentrated position in a single stock with a low cost basis) contributing their holdings into a newly formed exchange fund and then each owning a pro rata share of the new fund. As a result, it involves giving up most of the ownership of the initial concentrated position.
Completeness Portfolio
A completeness portfolio structures the other portfolio assets for greatest diversification benefit to complement (complete) the concentrated position. Invests in securities that have very low correlation to the concentrated position. Allows retention of ownership in concentrated asset.
Typical Objectives
Reducing the risk of wealth concentration, generating liquidity to diversify and satisfy spending needs, achieving these objectives in a tax efficient manner.
Three Tools to Address Concentrated Portfolio
Include outright sale, monetisation, and hedging. Outright sale can result in significant tax liabilities. Monetisation gives the person funds to spend without triggering a taxable event.
Downsides of Protective Put
Expenditure to purchase the put options, which can be significant depending on volatility of stock, strike price, and maturity. Another drawback is the counterparty risk of OTC derivatives.
Yield Enhancement Strategy
Selling call options to create a covered call. Using a strike price above the current price, and receiving the premium income (yield enhancement) from the sale. A liquidation value is essentially created. Main benefit is that implementing the covered call psychologically prepares the owner to dispose of the shares that may be overly concentrated. However the investor retains full downside exposure to the shares and the upside potential is limited.
Leveraged Recapitilization
This is a staged exit strategy, with two liquidity events for the owner, one being upfront and the next in 3-5 years when the private equity firms exits the investment. A private equity firm will invest equity capital and arrange debt. The owner will exchange his stock for cash (typically monetising 60-80%) and retain a significant portion in the newly capitalised entity. He retains upside potential with remaining ownership. If taxes are likely to increase in future, the cash portion will be higher. PE firms are however financial buyers and will pay less than strategic buyers (due to no synergies), and also the owner relinquishes control in the firm.
Types of Risk
Systematic risk cannot be avoided or diversified away and includes things like inflation, business cycle risk etc. Company specific risk is non-systematic and includes risks specific to the company like key person risk. Property specific risk is also unsystematic and can be diversified away, similar to company specific but related directly to the property.
Reducing Concentrated Positions
It is not always optimal to do this, for example when: there are restrictions on sale, a desire for control, to create wealth, and the asset may have other uses.
Institutional & Capital Market Constraints
Margin lending rates: limit the percentage of capital to be borrowed, rules based systems follow specific set rules, risk based would treat two transactions the same that rules based may treat differently as risk based can use derivates to hedge risk and allow 100% LVR lending.
Securities law and regulation: may define the owner as an insider and impose restrictions.
Contractual employer mandates: impose restrictions as minimum holding periods or black outs.
Capital market limitations: monetisation often require OTC derivatives, if the derivatives dealer cannot hedge the risk again that they are hedging for you (due to lack of price history, or prohibited short selling) they will not provide the hedge in the first place.
Recap on Biases
Cognitive (easier to be changed): conservatism, confirmation, illusion of control, anchoring and adjustment, availability in making decisions.
Emotional (harder to change): overconfidence, familiarity, illusion of knowledge, status quo bias, naive extrapolation of past results, endowment (getting more than paid for it), and loyalty.