T4 Managing an Equity Portfolio Flashcards
You are a portfolio manager with the following portfolio split among equities and fixed interest.
Briefly outline what insider trading is and how insider trading laws might affect:
1. A fund manager making a company visit
2. Management speaking to a fund manager during a company visit
Insider trading refers to transactions based on private information of a listed company that has not been made publicly available and would result in material impact on the market price of the company shares if publicly available. Insider trading is prohibited by Corporations Act.
- During a company visit, a fund manager can only expect to obtain material information that is already public. If he/she does obtain information that is not already public, it cannot be used.
- Management must be not give non-public price-sensitive information to a visiting analyst or fund manager during their discussions.
Explain the differences between fundamental equity analysis and technical equity analysis.
How does each of these aim to add value?
Fundamental analysis is based on the philosophy that all securities have intrinsic or fair values which are determined by the future cash flows and risk characteristics of the business and that market prices will, in the long run, reflect these intrinsic values. Such an investor then attempts to take advantage of short-term deviations from these intrinsic values (mispricing).
Technical analysis is based on the proposition that information concerning the future movement of stock prices may be obtained by the study of historical stock prices and their patterns. Attempts are made to profit by identifying likely short-term price movements based on these past price patterns.
Explain the differences between the following types of equity management:
1. Bottom-up (micro)
2. Top-down/theme-based (macro)
For each of these, indicate if they are fundamental analysis-based or technical analysis-based management styles.
The bottom-up style focuses on individual company research with usually an emphasis on the balance sheet and P/L accounts. Most, if not all, time is spent on modelling of individual companies. Macro-economic factors are considered within the framework of the individual company model.
The top-down style has a sectoral focus, with the aim of identifying broad macro-economic themes and trends. Only within these broad investment themes are stock-specific factors considered.
The two styles are both fundamental in nature and differ only by the degree to which macro and micro data is emphasised in the analysis.
Explain the practical problems faced by passive management i.e. tracking some index?
- Cost issue - very expensive and impractical to replicate the entire index - so, normally you’d cover the larger, more liquid stocks that make up most of the index, and sample the smaller, less liquid ones.
- Changes in the composition of the relevant index may be hard to tag.
What is the usual average ad valorem fee differential (between active and passive FUM)?
0.4% p.a.
Which cost items make up the transaction cost incurred by active management?
- brokerage 0.4% (on a round trip basis) plus
- 0.5% (for market impact i.e. impact of trade on mkt price of the shares) of turnover (active manager’s turnover rate is usually 50-80% p.a. vs 8% by a passive manager); plus
- potential CGT on realised capital gains
How do you calculate portfolio turnover rate?
Turnover rate = lower of purchases and sales / average asset value
Describe the overview of investment styles.
fundamental/qualitative analysis - most commonly used;
technical and quantitative analysis - less prevalent invesment styles.
What are the key variables for fundamental analysis (for active management for an equity portfolio)?
Macroeconomic variables - growth, inflation, interest rates
Industry sectors
- govt legislation
- technological innovation and new discoveries
- competitive structure of the industry (porters 5 forces)
Company stock specifics - management, market position, operating leverage, financial leverage, solvency
Describe in fundamental analysis how key variables are generally used?
Once you have assessed all relevant fundamental factors during research, you form a view about the long term impact these fundamental factors are estimated to have on the investment in question, then you estimate the expected long term asset Rs based on that long term impact, then you finalise your active management decisions: with that forecasted fundamental value in mind, as an active manager, you may be able to take advantage of short term price fluctuation, especially if the investment’s current mkt price deviates significantly from its long term expected mkt price (overbought or oversold).
Forecasting/evaluating earnings is mostly focused on PE. Why might mkt PE differ from PE in theory?
Because in practice, the appropriate PE for any particular company is influenced by further analysis i.e. market average PE (analysing historical PEs with adjustment making the PE data comparable) and stock specific factors (the P and the E, at any time, are subject to interest rates, inflation and economc cycle)
What alternative ways are there to forecast valuation of a listed company? (other than PE)
price/book
price/cash flow (quite popular as it focuses on CF avail to coy)
EV/sales
EV/EBIT
What is the main criticism against fundamental analysis?
The info gathered for the analysis is always lagging reality, hence provides little present/forecast guide to underlying changes within an industry/sector/company.
Name the 5 active fundamental management investment styles.
growth, value, GARP, quality, contrarian
What is growth investing? What is value investing? What is GARP investing?
Value stocks present an opportunity to buy shares below their actual value, and growth stocks exhibit above-average revenue and earnings growth potential. Growth and value most common styles (and the 2 tend to have negative correlation)
GARP stands for “growth at a reasonable price” and is really a combination of value and growth investing. GARP investors are looking for a stock that is trading for slightly less than its estimated value that also has earnings growth potential.