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Financial Assets & Investment Companies

This document provides an overview of asset and security classes, investment companies, and key financial markets concepts. It discusses the differences between real and financial assets, the balance sheet of US households, functions of financial markets, classes of securities including money market instruments, commercial paper, and investment companies. It also covers net asset value calculations for investment companies.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
416 views31 pages

Financial Assets & Investment Companies

This document provides an overview of asset and security classes, investment companies, and key financial markets concepts. It discusses the differences between real and financial assets, the balance sheet of US households, functions of financial markets, classes of securities including money market instruments, commercial paper, and investment companies. It also covers net asset value calculations for investment companies.

Uploaded by

Jol
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

FE445 Investment Analysis and Portfolio Management

Spring 2020

Yunjeen Kim

Boston University | Questrom School of Business


Lecture 2: Asset and Security
Classes, and Investment
Companies
Real vs. Financial Assets

• Real Assets:
• Used to produce goods and services:
land, buildings, equipment, and knowledge.
• Financial Assets:
• Claims on real assets or claims on asset income.
• Ultimate owners of all real assets:
• Households, non-profits, government, financial institutions
• Net wealth of an economy: aggregate all balance sheets
→ only real assets remain.
• All financial assets are offset by financial liabilities.

1
Balance Sheet U.S. Households 2014

Assets Liabilities and Net Worth


$ Billion % Total $ Billion % Total
Real assets
Real estate 22,820 23.88% Mortgages 9,551 10.00%
Consumer durables 5,041 5.28% Consumer credit 3,104 3.25%
Other 468 0.49% Bank and other loans 493 0.52%
Total real assets 28,330 29.65% Security credit 352 0.37%
Other 286 0.30%
Financial assets Total liabilities 13,786 14.43%
Deposits 9,783 10.24%
Life insurance reserves 1,257 1.32%
Pension reserves 19,766 20.69%
Corporate equity 13,502 14.13%
Equity in noncorp. Business 8,869 9.28%
Mutual fund shares 7,059 7.39%
Debt securities 5,263 5.51%
Other 1,720 1.80%
Total financial assets 67,219 70.35% Net worth 81,763 85.57%
Total 95,549 100.00% 95,549 100.00%

Source: U.S. Federal Reserve, Flow of Funds

2
Functions of Financial Markets

1. Informational role and capital allocation


• Do prices reflect value? (more later)
2. Consumption timing
• People tend to smooth consumption over time.
• Save for unexpected expenses: unemployment, medical treatment
• Most common savings motive: life-cycle
• Borrow when young.
• Invest in working age (mid-life).
• Draw down saving when old and retired.
3. Allocation of risk
• Investors can choose a desired risk level and risk type
4. Separation of ownership and management
• Think about large firms.

3
Classes of Financial Securities

• Debt (fixed-income securities): pay a specified cash flow (coupons,


principal) over a specific period.
• Money market instruments.
• Cash-like instruments: very low risk
• Bonds (capital market): safe unless firm goes bankrupt.
• Less risky
• Equity: pay an unspecified cash flow (dividends)
• Common stock: Ownership stake, residual cash flow after paying
back debt.
• More risky
• Derivatives:
• Contract whose value is derived from some other assets.

4
Money Market Instruments

• A sub-sector of the debt market.


• Very low risk and normally very liquid
• Easy to convert back into cash (e.g., deposits)
• Easy to sell on the market (marketable)
• Very short-term (maturity less than 1 year)
• Types:
• Treasury Bills (T-bills): proxy for risk-free security
• Certificates of Deposit (CD): a bank time deposit
• Repos and Reverses
• Commercial Paper (CP)
• Federal Funds

5
Repo Markets

• We often talk about buying and shorting securities. In fixed income


markets, this is accomplished via the repo market.
• A Repurchase Agreement (Repo) is an agreement to sell some
securities to another party and buy them back at a fixed date and
for a fixed amount. The price at which the security is bought back is
greater than the selling price and the difference implies an interest
called Repo Rate.
• A Reverse Repo is the opposite transaction, namely, it is the
purchase of the security for cash with the agreement to sell it back
to the original owner at a predetermined price, determined, once
again, by the Repo Rate.
• In simple words: A repo transaction is a short-term (overnight to 48
hours), collateralized loan.

6
Schematic Repo Transaction

• At time t, a trader wants to take a long position in a bond. Pt is


the (invoice) price of the bond.
• Haircut: Difference between Pt and amount trader can borrow.

time t

buy bond at Pt deliver bond


MARKET TRADER REPO DEALER
pay Pt get Pt −haircut

time T = t + n days

sell bond at PT get the bond


MARKET TRADER REPO DEALER
get PT n
pay (Pt −haircut) × (1+repo rate× 360 )

• Why do the participants agree to this trade?

7
Commercial Paper

• Issued by large creditworthy corporations.


• Short maturity: less than 1 or 2 months.
• Quite liquid.
• Default risk low: unsecured loan
• Unlikely to default within a few months.
• Asset Backed Commercial Paper (ABCP, more later)
• Recent innovation: issued by financial firms.
• Backed by a loan or security.
• Invest in other assets, subprime mortgages. Used as collateral.
• Mid-2007: collapsed when subprime collateral values fell.

8
Other Key Interest Rates

Federal Funds Rate:

• Banks with excess Fed funds lend to those with a shortage.


• Lending rate in this market is called Federal fund rate.

LIBOR (London Interbank Offer Rate):

• Rate at which large banks in London can borrow from each other;
i.e., interbank loans
• Is available in 5 currencies: USD, EUR, GBP, JPY, and CHF at
seven different maturities.
• World’s most widely used reference rate in the money market.

9
TED Spread = 3m LIBOR - 3m T-Bill

TED Spread

4.0

3.5

3.0

2.5
Percent

2.0

1.5

1.0

0.5

0.0
1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 2015

Shaded areas indicate U.S. recessions Source: Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis [Link]/g/l62J

10
Investment Companies

• Investment companies: financial intermediaries that collect funds


from individual investors and invest those funds in a potentially wide
range of securities or other assets.
• Functions:
• Diversification
• Professional management
• Lower research costs (shared with others)
• Portfolio managed according to certain objectives
• Professionals to find undervalued securities
• Reduced transaction costs (e.g. commissions)
• due to size of fund
• Administration & record keeping

11
Assets Held in Investment Companies

12
Net Asset Value

• Investors buy shares in investment companies.


• Net Asset Value (NAV): the value of each share.

Market Value of Assets − Liabilities


NAV =
Shares Outstanding
• For NAVs see: [Link]

13
NAV Calculation: Example 1

• Market Value Securities = $550 millions


• Cash & Receivables = $75 millions
• Current Liabilities = $20 millions
• Number of Fund Shares = 20 millions
• What is its NAV?

$550 million + $75 million − $20 million


NAV = = $30.25 per share
20 million shares

14
NAV Calculation: Example 2

• Consider a mutual fund that manages a portfolio of securities worth


$120 million.
• Suppose the fund owes $4 million to its investment advisors and owes
another $1 million for rent, wages due, and miscellaneous expenses.
• the fund has 5 million shares.
• What is its net asset value?

$120 million − $5 million


NAV = = $23 per share
5 million shares

15
Types of Investment Companies

Investment companies are classified by the Investment Company Act of


1940.

• Open-end Funds:
• Shares are bought from and redeemed by the fund
(Unlimited number of shares).
• Prices are equal to NAV
• Traded through companies.
• $10.1 trillion in 2010, $15 trillion in early 2014
• Closed-end Funds:
• Fixed number of shares are bought and sold among investors.
• Prices can differ from NAV
• Traded on exchanges.
• $242 billion in 2010

Management company manages the portfolio for an annual fee that


typically ranges between 0.2% to 1.5% of assets.
16
Closed End Funds: Example

Fund NAV Mrkt price Prem/Disc %


Adams Diversified Equity 18.54 15.78 -14.89
Advent/Clay Enhanced Growth 9.53 8.6 -9.77
Boulder Growth & Income 13.64 11.59 -15.03
Central Securities Corp 34.35 28.65 -16.59
Cohen & Steers CE Oppty 14.23 13.33 -6.32

Retrieved from WSJ (online) 19 January 2018

• Prem/Disc is defined as the percentage difference between the price


and NAV.
• Why do all the share prices differ from NAV?

17
Investment Companies cont’d

• Hedge Funds: are managed much more aggressively than their


mutual fund counterparts.
• Lightly regulated by SEC: they are able to take speculative positions
in derivative securities such as options and have the ability to short
sell stocks.
• Lock-ups: able to invest in illiquid assets.
• $2 trillion in 2008, $3 trillion in 2015.

• ETF(Exchange Traded Funds): a marketable security that tracks an


index, a commodity, bonds, or a basket of assets like an index fund.
• $1.71 trillion in 2011
• More later

18
U.S. Mutual Funds by Investment Classification, 2014

Assets ($ bn) Percent of Total Assets Number of Funds


Equity funds
Capital appreciation focus 1,725 11.50% 1,329
World/international 2,034 13.50% 1,345
Total return 4,004 26.70% 1,866

Total equity funds 7,764 51.70% 4,540


Bond funds
Investment grade 1,451 9.70% 594
High yield 412 2.70% 225
World 339 2.30% 270
Government 239 1.60% 214
Multisector 327 2.20% 143
Single-state municipal 145 1.00% 331
National municipal 353 2.40% 229

Total bond funds 3,265 21.70% 2,006


Hybrid (bond/stock) funds 1,270 8.50% 606
Money market funds
Taxable 2,448 16.30% 382
Tax-exempt 271 1.80% 173

Total money market funds 2,718 18.10% 555


TOTAL 15,018 100.00% 7,707

19
Costs of Investing in Mutual Funds

Fee Structure (fixed when buying)

• Front-end load
• A commission when you buy the shares (might go to brokers).
• Back-end load (known as “contingent deferred sales charge”)
• A redemption fee when you sell the shares soon.
• Operating expenses (typically 0.2-2%)
• Commissions, administration, management fees.
• Paid to investment managers
• Deducted from the assets of the fund periodically.
• 12 b-1 Charges SEC allows funds to use fund assets to pay for
distribution costs (not always: max. 1% )
• Marketing and distribution costs.
• Most importantly: Commissions to brokers.
• Assessed annually.

20
Different Classes of Fund Shares: Example

Class A Class B Class I


Front-end load 5.75%a 0% 0%
Back-end load 0% 1% 0%b
12b-1 feesc 0.25% 1% 0%
Expense Ratio 1.1% 1.1% 1.1%
a: depending on size of fund
b: depending on years until holdings are sold
c: including service fee of 0.25%

• Expense ratio = Annual Expenses / Average NAV


• Best alternative may depend on:
• Amount invested
• Expected holding period
• E.g.: [Link]/funds/[Link]
21
Fees and Mutual Fund Returns

• The rate of return in a mutual fund is measured as the increase or


decrease in NAV plus income distributions such as dividends or
distributions of capital gains at the beginning of the investment
period.
• Investors are taxed on capital gain and dividend distributions, even if
reinvested in the fund.
• If we denote the NAV at the start and end of the investment period
as NAV0 and NAV1 , then
NAV1 − NAV0 + DIST
Rate of Return =
NAV0

22
Fees and Mutual Fund Returns: Example

A fund has an initial NAV of $20 at the start of the month, makes
income distributions of $0.15 and capital gains of $0.05, and ends the
month with a NAV of $20.10. What is the monthly return?

$20.1 − $20 + $0.15 + $0.05


Rate of Return = = 1.5%
$20

23
But we ignored commissions!

• Consider a fund with $100 million in assets at the start of the year
and with 10 million shares outstanding.
• The fund invests in a portfolio of stocks that increased in value by
10%.
• The expense ratio, including 12b-1 fees, is 1%.
• What is the rate of return now?

The initial NAV is $100 million/10 million shares = $10 per share.
In the absence of expenses, the NAV grows to $11 per share.
The expense ratio is 1%, which lowers the NAV to $10.90. Hence the
rate of return is only 9% which equals the gross return on the underlying
portfolio minus the total expense ratio.

24
Exchange Traded Funds

Potential advantages:

• Trade continuously throughout the day.


• Can be sold short or purchased on margin.
• No redemptions, but large investors can exchange ETF shares for
shares in the underlying portfolio.
→ links NAV to underlying asset value
• Lower costs (expenses)

Potential disadvantages:

• Small deviations from NAV possible.


• Must pay a brokerage commission to buy an ETF.

25
Assets in ETFs

26
Summary

This Class:

• Investment companies are helpful especially for small investors to


create portfolio but charge high fees.

Next Class:

• Performance of securities
• Compounding
• Nominal vs. Real returns

27
Problem 4.25

• Class A shares:
• Front-end load 4%
• Class B shares:
• 12b-1 fee 0.5%
• Back-end load of 5% which falls by 1% after each full year the
investor holds the portfolio (until the 5th year).
• Portfolio return net of operating expenses: 10% per year.

If you plan to sell after 4 full years, which is better?


Suppose you have $1,000 to invest.
The initial investment in Class A shares is $940 net of the front-end load.
After 4 years, your portfolio will be worth: $940 × 1.104 = $1, 376.25
Class B shares allow you to invest the full $1,000, but your investment
performance net of 12b-1 fees will be only 9.5%, and you will pay a 1%
back-end load fee if you sell after 4 years. Your redemption value after 4
years: $1, 000 × 1.0954 × 0.99 = $1, 423.28 28
Problem 4.25 cont’d

• Class A shares:
• Front-end load 4%
• Class B shares:
• 12b-1 fee 0.5%
• Back-end load of 5% which falls by 1% after each full year the
investor holds the portfolio (until the 5th year)
• Portfolio return net of operating expenses: 10% per year

If you plan to sell after 15 full years, which is better?


Class A: $940 × 1.1015 = $3, 926.61
Class B: $1, 000 × 1.09515 = $3, 901.32

29

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