mutual funds, etfs, and hedge funds

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Mutual Funds, ETFs, and Hedge Funds Chapter 4

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Page 1: Mutual Funds, ETFs, and Hedge Funds

Mutual Funds, ETFs, and Hedge Funds

Chapter 4

Page 2: Mutual Funds, ETFs, and Hedge Funds

Services of Investment Companies

1. Administration and record keeping

2. Diversification and divisibility

3. Professional management

4. Lower Transaction Costs

Page 3: Mutual Funds, ETFs, and Hedge Funds

Characteristics of Investment Companies

• Typically small minimum investments

• Assets are pooled together, so one client is affected by other client actions

• No special tax strategies possible

• Clients do not own the actual shares of stocks they are invested in

• Instead, they own shares of the fund that owns the underlying stocks

Page 4: Mutual Funds, ETFs, and Hedge Funds

Market Value Calculation:Net Asset Value

gOutstandin Shares Fund Total

Expenses FundPortfolio of ValueMarket Total NAV

Example

Market Value = $100 mil

Number of Shares = 10 mil

NAV = $100 / 10 = $10 / share

Suppose Market Value goes up to $112.5 mil, and the fund expenses during that period were $0.1 mil. What is the ending NAV?

NAV = (112.5 – 0.1) / 10 = $11.24 / share

Page 5: Mutual Funds, ETFs, and Hedge Funds

Types of Investment Organizations

• Managed Investment companies

– Open-end funds (mutual funds)

– Closed-end funds

• Other investment organizations

– ETFs (Exchange Traded Funds)

– Hedge Funds

Page 6: Mutual Funds, ETFs, and Hedge Funds

Open-end (Mutual Fund)

• Number of shares outstanding can vary from day to day.

• Buy back (redeem) shares or sell additional shares at the NAV. Need to hold cash reserve for redemptions.

• There may be a sales charge (load) when the fund sells the shares to customers.

• May charge a redemption fee when the customers sell their shares back by the fund.

• Fund can “cap” out and not accept new investors. Otherwise, the fund can continue to grow by issuing new shares.

Page 7: Mutual Funds, ETFs, and Hedge Funds

Mutual Fund Styles

• Money market

• Fixed Income

• Equity

• Balance & Income

• Asset allocation

• Specialized sector (gold, financial)

• Style (Growth versus Value)

• Indexed

Page 8: Mutual Funds, ETFs, and Hedge Funds

• Income Funds: High Dividend yield stocks.

• Growth Funds: Forego dividend yield for capital gains. Invest in well-established firms.

• Aggressive Growth: Seek maximum capital growth.

Equity Mutual Funds Classes

Page 9: Mutual Funds, ETFs, and Hedge Funds

Mutual Fund Fees• Sales and Marketing Fees

– Front End Load: Paid when shares are purchased.• Load: from 3% to approximately 8% of NAV• Low-Load: Up to 3%• No-Load: No sales charge

– Be careful! Back-End Loads• 5-6% fee on sale. Typically drops by say 1% every year.

– 12b-1 Fees• An alternative to a load to cover advertising & marketing

expenses. No-Load and Low-Load funds use these.• Can deduct as much as 0.75% of assets annually to cover

fund advertising & marketing.

Page 10: Mutual Funds, ETFs, and Hedge Funds

Sales & Marketing Fee Choice

• Some funds give you a choice as to how you want to pay your share of the expenses by offering alternatives called choices “A”, “B” or “C”.A: Front-end load. No 12b-1 fees. No back-end load.B: No Front-end load. Small 12b-1 fees. back-end load

that decreases the longer you hold shares.C: No Front-end load. Larger 12b-1 fees. Shorter back-

end load penalty period.

Page 11: Mutual Funds, ETFs, and Hedge Funds

Management and Record Fees

• Management Fees

– Range is typically 0.20% to 1.00%.

• Records Fees

– Can be as much as 0.25% of assets annually.

Page 12: Mutual Funds, ETFs, and Hedge Funds

Expense Ratio

Total Annual Expenses include:12b-1 fees, Management fees, records fees

Expense Ratio = Total Annual Expenses/$ Amt of Fund Assets

Studies find that funds with lower expense ratios earn higher returns than those with higher expense ratios.

Page 13: Mutual Funds, ETFs, and Hedge Funds

Typical Feesfor US. Domestic Equity Funds

as of 2005

Page 14: Mutual Funds, ETFs, and Hedge Funds

Closed-End Funds

• Shares of the fund trades on the secondary market

• Fund does not usually offer additional shares or repurchase shares

• No need for cash reserve for liquidity needs.

• Market price is often different from (usually at a discount to) the NAV.

Page 15: Mutual Funds, ETFs, and Hedge Funds

Closed-End Fund Fees

• Management and Record fees can be charged within the fund

• Sales charges do not exist• Commissions are charged to each

purchase and sale, exactly like a stock transaction

Page 16: Mutual Funds, ETFs, and Hedge Funds

ETFs (Exchange Traded Funds)• A Hybrid of open-end fund and the closed-end fund.

– Traded throughout the day, similar to the closed-end fund.– Institutional investors can redeem shares for the underlying

securities, or exchange the portfolio of stocks for the shares, similar to the open end mutual fund.

• Implication on premium/discount.

• Examples– SPDR, “DIAMOND”, “Qubes”– iShares track international indices– Sector ETFs (energy, utilities, technology, industrials,

transportation, etc.)

Page 17: Mutual Funds, ETFs, and Hedge Funds

ETFs (Exchange Traded Funds)

• Example– Spiders

• One share 1/10 of price S&P 500 index.• Can create or delete by exchanging shares plus

cash at the end of the day in units of 50,000 shares and cost of $3,000. (fixed, not affected by number of units).

Page 18: Mutual Funds, ETFs, and Hedge Funds

Concerns: Turnover & Taxes

• Turnover: Fraction of portfolio replaced each year.

• Mutual funds, CEFs, and ETFs have pass-through-status which means that taxes are paid only by the investor, not the mutual fund.

• To accomplish this, the fund must pass on all capital gains and dividends to the client.

• Not an issue if in a tax-deferred retirement account

Page 19: Mutual Funds, ETFs, and Hedge Funds

Hedge Funds

• Often off shore• Typically only offered to “qualified” investors• More risk allowed, and typically taken• More flexible in their investments: short

positions, leverage, private placements• Higher fees charged• More frequent change in their composition• Pure ones are market neutral

Page 20: Mutual Funds, ETFs, and Hedge Funds

Hedge Funds

• Dynamic investment– Rarely buy-and-hold– Fees reflect active management– Information-driven trading– Static risk analytics not appropriate

Page 21: Mutual Funds, ETFs, and Hedge Funds

Hedge Funds

• Long/Short Market Neutral Strategy– CAPM:

• Beta of the portfolio=0.

– Fama-French 3-factor:• Small cap manager: 50% long, 50% short in

growth stocks so neutral regarding style risk.• Growth style manager: 50% long, 50% short in

small cap stocks so neutral regarding size risk.

Page 22: Mutual Funds, ETFs, and Hedge Funds

Index Fund and Passive Equity Management

• Logic: Market is fairly efficient. Too difficult to overcome 1 - 2% costs of running an active equity portfolio.

• Goal: Don’t try to beat the market, just equal it!• Passive Features

– Portfolio is built without using technical or fundamental analysis.

– Buy & Hold: The securities are purchased and then held with only occasional re-balancing (reinvest dividends, a change in the index etc…)

Page 23: Mutual Funds, ETFs, and Hedge Funds

Index Funds

• Passive portfolios that track an index and sell shares to investors are called Index Funds: (Eg: Vanguard 500 Index which tracks the S&P 500.)

• Manager Performance: Judged by how well he/she tracks the index or sector and by the costs generated to do so.

Page 24: Mutual Funds, ETFs, and Hedge Funds

Size of Indexing--- as of June 2003

Index Assets

Benchmarked($ billions)

Ratio of assetsbenchmarked to market

value of index

S&P 500 includinggrowth/value 1,127 11.3%

Russell 1000 includingGrowth/Value 430 3.8%

Russell 2000 includingGrowth/Value 264 26.4%

Russell Mid-Cap incl.Growth/Value 81 2.7%

S&P Mid-Cap 400 44 5.0%

Wilshire 5000 13 0.1%

Nasdaq Composite 3 0.1%

Dow Jones 2 0.1%

S&P Small-Cap 600 2 0.5%

Total US Markets 12,500

Page 25: Mutual Funds, ETFs, and Hedge Funds

Index Fund Types

1. Full Replication: Buy all stocks in the index in proportion to their weights in the index.

2. Sampling: Buy the stocks with larger index weights & hold a representative sample of the others.– Benefit Relative to Full Replication: Lower

commissions (fewer stocks to purchase and to reinvest dividends).

– Drawback Relative to Full Replication: Tracking Error.

Page 26: Mutual Funds, ETFs, and Hedge Funds

Evaluating Index Fund Manager Performance

• R-Square: Measures how closely the fund is moving with the benchmark index– This measures tracking, but not costs

• Tracking error: Measures tracking and costs: absolute value of (Rit – Rmt), t = 1 to T, or

(Rit – Rmt)2, t = 1 to T

Page 27: Mutual Funds, ETFs, and Hedge Funds

Addition and Deletion Effects for Indexes

• Additions: – What to expect? Why?

• Deletions:– What to expect? Why?

• Empirical Evidence– Chen, Noronha, and Singal (2004, Journal of

Finance)

Page 28: Mutual Funds, ETFs, and Hedge Funds

Figure 1. Price Responses to Changes to the S&P 500 Index198910-200212

-16

-12

-8

-4

0

4

8

12

AnnDate -1 AnnDate EffDate EffDate + 20 EffDate + 60

Additions

Deletions

Page 29: Mutual Funds, ETFs, and Hedge Funds

Implication for Index Fund Investors

• NY Times (July 4, 2004)• Barron’s (April 3, 2006)• Chen, Noronha and Singal (2006, FAJ)

– Compare losses to two popular indexes• Investors in funds indexed to S&P 500 lose up to 0.10% per

year• Investors in funds indexed to the Russell 2000 lose up to

1.84% per year• Total loss = Up to $5 billion• Note: Losses in the mutual fund scandal were estimated

between $0.5 and $3 billion.

Page 30: Mutual Funds, ETFs, and Hedge Funds
Page 31: Mutual Funds, ETFs, and Hedge Funds
Page 32: Mutual Funds, ETFs, and Hedge Funds

Assignment

• Chapter 4 Problems:– 2, 3, 4, 6, 10, 11, 18