Reading 8 Managing Individual Investor Portfolios Flashcards
Behavioral models of the portfolio building process relied on the following tenets
According to behavioral models of individual decision making, portfolio construction takes place under a more complex set of assumptions than those given previously:
- Asset pricing reflects both economic considerations, such as production costs and prices of substitutes, and subjective individual considerations, such as tastes and fears.
- Portfolios are constructed as “pyramids” of assets, layer by layer, in which each layer reflects certain goals and constraints.
Time horizon constraint
- Time horizon. The total time period over which the portfolio will be managed to meet the investor`s objectives and constraints.
- A stage in the time horizon is indicated any time the individual experiences or expects to experience a change in circumstances significant enough to require evaluation the IPS and relocating the portfolio. This can include retirement and major expenses such as college costs, expected inheritance, et cetera. The most common time horizon is with two stages: “x years to retirement and retirement of 20-25 years.”
- In many planning contexts, time horizons greater than 15 to 20 years can be viewed as relatively long term, and horizons of less than 3 years as relatively short term.
division of return requirements between “income” and “growth” objectives - shortcomes?
The traditional division of return requirements between “income” and “growth” objectives may seem intuitive, but these terms blur the distinction between return goals and risk tolerance. The “total return” approach seeks to identify a portfolio return that will meet the investor’s objectives without exceeding the portfolio’s risk tolerance or violating its investment constraints.
Stage of Life
individual’s investment policy can be viewed as passing through four general phases: foundation, accumulation, maintenance, and distribution.
- During the foundation phase of life, the individual is establishing the base from which wealth will be created.
- In the accumulation phase, earnings accelerate as returns accrue from the marketable skills and abilities acquired during the foundation period and gradually reach their peak.
- During the maintenance phase, the individual has moved into the later years of life and usually has retired from daily employment or the pressures of owning a business.
- In the distribution phase, accumulated wealth is transferred to other persons or entities.
Constant-Mix Investing
This is a dynamic asset allocation strategy.
The objective of constant-mix is to maintain a ratio of, for example, 60% stocks and 40% bonds, within a specified range by rebalancing. You are forced to buy securities when their prices are falling and sell securities when they are rising relative to each other. Constant-mix strategy takes a contrarian view to maintaining a desired mix of assets, regardless of the amount of wealth you have. You essentially are buying low and selling high as you sell the best performers to buy the worst performers. Constant-mix becomes more aggressive as stocks fall and more defensive as stocks rise.
Discuss the major constraint categories included in an individual investor’s investment policy statement
Portfolio constraints generally fall into one of five categories:
- liquidity;
- time horizon;
- taxes;
- legal and regulatory environment;
- unique circumstances.
Tax considerations constraint
- General classificaions of taxes include income tax, capital gain tax, transfer tax, and wealth or personal property tax. Strategies used to reduce the adverse impact of taxes include tax deferral, tax avoidance, and transferring wealth to others without unilizing a sale.
- The issue of taxes is perhaps the most universal and complex investment constraint to be found in private portfolio management.
- Tax Deferral: for the long-term investor, periodic tax payments severely diminish the benefit of compounding portfolio returns. Many tax strategies, therefore, seek to defer taxes and maximize the time during which investment returns can be reinvested
- Tax avoidance: Tax-advantaged investment alternatives typically come at a price, however, paid in some combination of lower returns, reduced liquidity, and diminished control.
- Early transfers: the benefit of early wealth transfers is largely determined by tax codes and life expectancies. Additional issues to consider before making a permanent transfer include 1) the amount of retained wealth needed to ensure the financial security of the primary investor; 2) possible unintended consequences of transferring large amounts of wealth to younger, potentially less mature beneficiaries; and 3) the probable stability or volatility of the tax code
reasonable baseline measure of shortfall risk?
The expected return less two times the portfolio risk (expected standard deviation) is a reasonable baseline measure of shortfall risk
Explain how to set risk and return objectives for individual investor portfolios and discuss the impact that ability and willingness to take risk have on risk tolerance
Ultimately, the return and risk objectives have to be consistent with reasonable capital market expectations as well as the client constraints. If there are inconsistencies, they must be resolved working with the client.
- All else equal, portfolio size versus needs, time horizon, and ability to take risk are positively related.
- Goal importance, level of spending needs, and ability to take risk are negatevily related.
- Flexibility can increase the ability to take risk.
- Willingness to take risk is subjective.
- Explicit statements, client actions, and situational profiling are used to indicate the client`s willingness to take risk.
Prepare and justify an investment policy statement for an individual investor;
The IPS is a document that is developed as the result of a client interview to determine their risk (ability and willingness) and return objectives and the five constraints, which consist of the time horizon, unique circumstances, taxes, legal and regulatory, and liquidity constraints.
An asset **allocation for the clients portfolio is then determined and implemented, monitored, and subsequently revised as need depending on changes in the client
s circumstances as reflected in a periodic review of client`s IPS.
Behavioral finance assumes investors exhibit three phychological characteristics
Behavioral finance assumes investors exhibit three phychological characteristics:
- Loss aversion
- Biased expectations. This means investors have too much confidence in thier ability to forecast the future.
- Asset segregation. Instead of evaluation an investment`s impact on the overall portfolio position, investros focus on individual assets.
Liquidity constraints
Liquidity refers generally to the investment portfolio’s ability to efficiently meet an investor’s anticipated and unanticipated demands for cash distributions. Two trading characteristics of its holdings determine a portfolio’s liquidity:
- Transaction Costs
- Price Volatility
Liquidity requirements can arise for any number of reasons but generally fall into one of the following categories:
- Ongoing Expenses
- Emergency Reserves
- Negative Liquidity Events
Benefits of IPS to the Client
Benefits to the Client:
- Objectives and constraits are condsidered in formulating investment decisions that benefit the client
- The process is dynamic and allow changes in circumstances to be incorporated.
- A well-written IPS represents the long-term objectives of the investor
- Subsequent managers should be able to implement decisions congruent with the individual`s goals
Source of Wealth
Some classification schemes presume that the manner in which an individual investor has acquired wealth offers insight into that investor’s probable attitude toward risk.
“Self-made” investors may have greater familiarity with risk-taking and a higher degree of confidence in their ability to recover from setbacks.
More-passive recipients of wealth may be associated with reduced willingness to assume risk.
The Personal Trust
- Trust is a legal entity established to hold and manage assets in accordance with specific instructions.
- The term “personal trust” refers to trusts established by an individual, who is called the “grantor.” The trust is a recognized owner of assets and can be subject to taxation in much the same manner that individuals are taxed. To form a trust, the creator (grantor) drafts a trust document defining the trust’s purpose and naming a trustee who will be responsible for oversight and administration of the trust’s assets. The trustee may or may not be the same person as the grantor.
- The two basic types of personal trusts, revocable and irrevocable, differ largely with respect to the issue of control.
- In a revocable trust, any term of the trust can be revoked or amended by the grantor at any time.
- In an irrevocable trust, the terms of management during the grantor’s life and the disposition of assets upon the grantor’s death are fixed and cannot be revoked or amended. The creation of an irrevocable trust is generally considered to be an immediate and irreversible transfer of property ownership, and a wealth transfer tax, sometimes called a gift tax, may have to be paid when the trust is funded.