individual client asset allocation and investment strategies
TRANSCRIPT
Asset Allocation
Asset allocation: the process of determining the appropriate mix for different
asset classes in an investor’s portfolio and maintaining those proportions over
time. For individual investors, the process involves three strategies:
Portfolio Rebalancing
Strategic Asset Allocation
Tactical Asset Allocation
Strategic Asset Allocation (SAA)
• Strategic asset allocation (SAA): is the benchmark asset mix designed to
achieve the client’s longer-term objectives while taking into account any
constraints.
• It incorporates the expectations of the investment advisor or the advisory firm
for the return, risk, and correlation among the asset classes.
Once set, the SAA becomes a benchmark for performance of the client’s
portfolio. It is also referred to as policy, passive, or benchmark asset
allocation.
It requires the following steps:
• Establish client objectives and constraints
• Specify asset classes eligible for the portfolio;
• Specify capital market expectations
• Derive the efficient portfolio frontier;
• Find and set the optimal asset mix.
SAA aims to design an optimal, or efficient, portfolio for which the expected
return is maximized for a given level of risk or, equally, the risk is minimized for
a given expected return.
The overall objective is normally based on balancing the need to control
inflation, interest rate, and market risk against the desire for enhanced returns.
Strategic Asset Allocation (SAA)
Steps: Strategic Asset Allocation
• Establish client objectives and constraints: based on factors such as the
client’s return objectives, risk tolerance, time horizon, liquidity needs, legal
constraints, tax considerations, and other special circumstances.
Goals and objectives often conflict with one another, and investors with short
horizons face different risks than do long-term investors. Goals and
objectives should be clearly articulated.
E.g., average portfolio return of 4% above the inflation rate, beating an
inflation index by 2%pa etc.
The aim should be for a single strategic asset allocation for a client’s entire
investment portfolio at any given time, balancing the client’s objectives and
constraints across one relatively long-term time horizon.
Specify asset classes eligible for the portfolio: three broad asset classes; cash,
debt securities (also known as bonds or fixed-income securities), and equities
but this is no longer adequate due to the evolution and proliferation of financial
instruments.
An Asset class is a group of assets available for direct investment that has a set
of return and risk characteristics distinct from those of other groups of assets.
Specifically, the group selected should have a low or negative correlation with
other asset classes.
The IA should combine low- or negative-correlation assets to build the lowest-
variance, highest-return portfolio possible.
Steps: Strategic Asset Allocation
• Specify capital market expectations - developing a set of capital market
expectations for the various asset classes being considered for the portfolio
mix.
These expectations specify returns, variances, and co-variances (correlation
coefficients) among the various asset classes.
Expectations are normally based on historical asset class results, including
average returns, standard deviations, etc for each asset class which is adjusted
for current economic forecasts, based on prevailing economic scenarios and
probability of occurrence.
Steps: Strategic Asset Allocation
Specify capital market expectations (cont’d)
Forecasts are reviewed periodically – quarterly, semi/ annually, typically based
on 5yr periods, recent trends and potential changes in asset class returns.
• Deriving the efficient portfolio frontier; the “portfolio opportunity set” (the
set of all possible asset combinations) is derived from capital market
expectations and their probability distributions.
Then from this set, the efficient frontier – the highest-return portfolio at each
risk level – is identified.
Steps: Strategic Asset Allocation
Find and set the optimal asset mix- The integration of capital market
expectations and risk tolerances to produce the long-term asset mix that reflects
the optimum portfolio at the investor’s risk level.
The optimum portfolio is selected using one of three methods:
• Rules of thumb
• Ad hoc approach
• Mean-variance analysis
Steps: Strategic Asset Allocation
Rule of thumb: Based on simple rules that are quite simple to implement
e.g. time diversification and Age approach..
o Time diversification: over the long term, the return/risk trade-off for
equities improves over that of all other asset classes, and therefore the
longer the time horizon, the lower the risk of holding equities over
longer periods. This leads to a recommendation that younger clients
hold a greater percentage of their portfolios in equities than older
clients would because equities offer the greatest expected return.
Steps: Strategic Asset Allocation
o Age Approach: recommends a specific SAA based solely on the client’s
age. It suggests an allocation to debt securities (including cash and cash
equivalents) equal to the client’s age. With this rule, the allocation to
equities equals 100 minus the client’s age.
Steps: Strategic Asset Allocation
E.g., For a 35 year old client, the age approach to strategic asset allocation
suggests a 65% weight in equities and a 35% weight in debt securities.
As the client approaches retirement, the allocation to debt securities will
increase and the allocation to equities will decline.
By retirement, the suggested allocation will be 35% in equities and 65% in debt
securities.
• Mean-variance Analysis:
1. A “pure” mean-variance analysis requires the investment advisor to
include information on capital market expectations and to estimate a
numerical value for the client’s risk tolerance.
The specific analysis provides guidance on how to estimate the risk
tolerance variable.
Using this information, the “pure” optimizer, a quadratic formula that
maximizes investor utility, recommends a single strategic asset
allocation that is both efficient and acceptable given the client’s risk
tolerance.
Steps: Strategic Asset Allocation
2. Other optimizers require only a set of capital market expectations as input.
Using this information, they produce several recommended asset allocations, all
of which are efficient.
The advisor then simply selects what he feels is the appropriate asset allocation
for the client based on the client’s return objective and risk tolerance.
Complex calculations and computer programs are normally designed to client
responses in a model to determine client risk appetites and appropriate strategic
asset allocation.
Steps: Strategic Asset Allocation
Ad Hoc Approach: least desirable or applied as it concentrates on gut
feeling about the market but yet, clients goals and objective considered. Not
recommended.
Steps: Strategic Asset Allocation
• Also referred to as dynamic asset allocation.
The client’s portfolio must be rebalanced periodically to maintain the desired
asset mix over the long term.
Rebalancing is necessary because the actual asset mix will change as
dividends and interest payments are made and as market prices and economic
conditions change.
Rebalancing may also be required if changes occur in the client’s objectives
or constraints or in the expected risk and return of the asset classes.
Asset Allocation - Portfolio Rebalancing
• This is a decision by the client and investment advisor to change the client’s
original SAA to take advantage of perceived opportunities created by short-
term fluctuations in the relative performance of asset classes.
TAA operates within limits determined by minimum and maximum asset class
weights.
It is also occasionally referred to as active asset allocation.
Together; Strategic asset allocation, portfolio rebalancing and Tactical asset
allocation are referred to as Integrated Asset Allocation.
Asset Allocation – Tactical Asset Allocation
Benefits of Asset Allocation
• Accounts for most of a portfolio’s long-term returns.
• The strategic asset allocation is designed to be an optimal investment portfolio:
Portfolios are subject to two kinds of risk: systematic (related to the market)
and unsystematic (related to the individual security).
The goal of strategic asset allocation is to lower systematic risk and eliminate
unsystematic risk.
• It allows meaningful performance measurement. In the absence of a clear
SAA, goal setting – and measuring progress against those goals – would be
difficult.
• Long-term investment objectives are kept in focus – focusing tool.
• Tactical asset allocation allows for opportunities to realize enhanced returns
through successful portfolio tilting.
Benefits of Asset Allocation
Dynamic asset allocation refers to the systematic rebalancing, either temporally
or based on weights, needed to return the portfolio to the long-term benchmark
asset-class mix. Rebalancing reflects the following basic assumptions:
Capital market expectations remain constant. If capital market expectations
change, all calculations underlying the asset mix are redone.
Risk tolerance remains constant. If risk tolerance changes, the efficient frontier
remains intact but the optimum portfolio changes.
Dynamic Asset Allocation
Investment objectives remain constant.
If objectives change, the efficient frontier
remains intact but the optimum portfolio
changes.
The asset mix may drift from the target
because of structural or procedural
administrative matters, abnormal returns
within asset classes, or changing capital
market conditions.
Dynamic Asset Allocation
CASH
ASSET ALLOCATION
STOCKS
BONDS
REAL ESTATE
COMMODITIES
METALS
PRIVATE EQUITY
Component Value Weight
Cash 20 20
Fixed Income 30 30
Equities 50 50
Total 100 100
To show the effect of re-balancing in a portfolio mix of $20 million in money
market mutual funds, $30 million in bonds, and $50 million in equities.
Assuming the target is to maintain the asset mix @ 20:30:50 as represented in
table below.
Rebalancing: Example
Rebalancing: Example
Component Value Weight
Cash 21 17.5
Fixed Income 32 26.2
Equities 69 56.6
Total 122 100
If market shifts as a result of strong equity performance, altering the asset mix to
N21M,N32M,and N69M.
The weights will change and is as reflected in table below
Component Target Weight (%) Required Value Current Value Diff
Cash 20 24.4 21 3.4
Fixed Income 30 36.6 32 4.6
Equities 50 61.0 69 -8
Total 100 122 122
The strong equity performance will necessitate the rebalancing of the portfolio
to as stipulated in line with the table below
Rebalancing: Example
Tactical Asset Allocation
The process of tilting a portfolio to take advantage of perceived inefficiencies in
the prices of securities in different asset classes or in different sectors within a
class.
The portfolio’s policy statement often defines a range for such tactical tilting that
goes beyond the strategic asset weightings. (e.g., overweighting stocks over
bonds).
*moving in and out of assets can incur costs e.g., transaction costs
Asset Allocation: Accumulation Statge
There is an approach that bases asset accumulation on the various stages in the
clients life.
There are four accumulation stages:
• Seed-money formation stage
• Mid-life growth stage,
• Pre-retirement consolidation stage
• Retirement stage.
The typical characteristics of clients at each of these stages can be used to
develop a client’s strategic asset allocation.
Seed-money formation stage
-occurs between age 20 and age 45. The objective is to accumulate sufficient seed
money to create a base for future growth.
Client has few assets to invest, a lot of optimism and plenty of future saving
power.
This is the client’s most important, yet most vulnerable, stage.
Consider the seed-money formation stage complete when a client has saved twice
his estimated annual post-retirement withdrawals.
Most asset allocation guidelines point to an aggressive portfolio consisting of
70% to 90% equities for younger investors because this group has a longer
horizon.
Seed-money formation stage
Clients at this stage tend to perceive any loss of seed money as significant.
The most important factor during the seed-money formation stage is maintaining
investment discipline and conservatism, month after month, year after year.
The lower volatility of a conservative portfolio will give the investor much-
needed staying power
During accumulation years, portfolios should be reviewed regularly to make
sure that the client’s retirement objectives can be met and/or his expectations can
be adjusted.
Mid-life growth stage
-generally occurs between ages 35 and 60, clients have general idea of where
they are going in their lives.
Importance of luck should not be ignored in the growth of portfolios during this
stage.
Markets move in different waves - secular trends, megatrends or generational
trends, trends can last as long as 20yrs. Usually, the determining factor is client’s
ability to save money.
The asset allocation should be kept at the optimum mix, and rebalanced annually.
The mid-life growth stage is complete when the portfolio value is 20 times the
estimated annual post-retirement withdrawals from the portfolio.
E.g., if a client needs $20,000 per
year (pre-tax) from the portfolio
during retirement and the portfolio
contains $400,000, the client has
completed the mid-life growth stage.
The emphasis during this stage is on
continued saving and the focus is on
long-term goals.
Mid-life growth stage
Changing Priorities
Ahead
Pre-retirement Consolidation Stage
- usually occurs between age 55 and 65. Most of the capital formation, whether it
is the investment portfolio, real estate or business, is completed during this stage.
During this stage, the primary goal is to preserve funds. Any growth is
secondary.
If a client is still working, or retired from work but not in need of periodic
income from her portfolio, then there is still an opportunity to increase the value
of the portfolio conservatively.
Although there is generally supposed to be sufficient money available to
finance retirement through life annuities at this stage, taking the portfolio value
from 20 times to 30 times the estimated annual retirement withdrawals will
allow the client to finance her retirement totally from the portfolio without
using life annuities.
Doing so will also give the client the opportunity to accumulate a sizeable
estate.
Pre-retirement Consolidation Stage
Investment Strategy
- the investment strategy to be used in the selection of individual securities or
managed products for the portfolio needs to be identified.
It is a function of what the manager or advisor believes about investment
finance.
Strategies can be active or passive, can be bottom-up or top-down, can focus on
value or growth or on small- or large-capitalization stocks, or employ sector
rotation.
Passive and Active Equity Strategies
Passive Investing Active Investing
Investment Philosophy
Guiding` Portfolio
Equity Strategies
Equity investment strategy can be Passive or Active.
• An active investment strategy uses expectations about individual securities
and the overall investment environment to build a portfolio that will take
advantage of those expectations.
If the expectations change, the portfolio will likely change as well.
• A passive investment strategy, on the other hand, does not lead to portfolio
changes when expectations change.
Many investors mix passive and active investment strategies when they construct
their portfolios.
Efficient-market Hypothesis
Choice of investment strategy depends on the investor’s belief in market
efficiency.
Efficient-market hypothesis states that asset prices reflect available
information in efficient markets.
Theory has three forms, that assumes different amounts of information is
reflected in asset prices:
• Weak form: Current prices incorporate all information about past prices,
volumes, and returns. This implies that technical analysis cannot consistently
beat the market.
• Semi-strong form: Current prices reflect all publicly available information.
This implies that neither fundamental nor technical analysis can be used and
will do nothing to help investors beat the market.
• Strong form: Prices reflect all information, including insider information.
This implies that no type of further analysis is helpful in beating the market.
Efficient-market Hypothesis
Passive Equity Strategies
Passive Investing Active Investing
Investment Philosophy
Guiding` Portfolio
Passive Strategies
- two most widely recognized Passive Strategies are: indexing and buy-and-
hold.
With a buy-and-hold strategy, the investment advisor and client select a group
of securities or managed products and the client holds them until he or she needs
to sell them to meet investment goals.
An indexed portfolio is designed to track the performance of a specific market
index. Investors do not necessarily need to believe in the efficient-market theory
to index. Investors may simply not have the time, resources, or inclination to
follow an active strategy.
Advantage of Indexing Strategy:
• A low risk of underperforming the benchmark.
• Fees that are usually lower than those associated with most active strategies.
• The fact that the strategy does not depend on the ability of the client or
investment advisor to select securities or managed products that will
outperform the benchmark.
Passive Strategies
Disadvantages to indexing:
• Potential underperformance relative to active strategies
• Risk Index return does not meet portfolio objectives or constraints
• Lack of assurance that the performance of the index will be matched
• The underweighting of some indexes in well-performing sectors
• Inefficiency from an after-tax perspective
Passive Strategies
Strategies: Active Equity Investment
Passive Investing Active Investing
Investment Philosophy
Guiding` Portfolio
Active Equity Investment Strategies
- can be separated into two groups based on the approach used in selecting stocks
for purchase or sale:
• Bottom-up Approach
• Top-down Approach
Investment advisors and clients who pick individual stocks can use either of these
approaches to guide their selections.
Advisors and clients who use managed products can ask the fund manager which
approach he or she uses.
Bottom-up Analysis
Starts with a focus on individual stocks. Investors or portfolio managers review
the characteristics of individual stocks and build portfolios of the best stocks in
terms of forecast risk-return characteristics.
It can be classified as style-based or non-style-based.
Style-based approaches involve focusing on a particular set of stocks that
have similar fundamental characteristics and performance patterns.
Non-style-based approaches do not focus on a particular group of stocks but
involve a search for stocks with the best chance of meeting particular
objectives.
Some investors use screening procedures to identify stocks that have particular
attributes believed to be associated with superior investment performance.
The choice of screening criteria is often based on historical stock returns.
Other bottom-up approaches use a more technical approach in which stocks are
bought or sold based on patterns on stock charts or based on statistical analysis
of historical trading data.
Bottom-up Analysis
Style-based Approach
A bottom-up approach to active equity investing that focuses on a particular set
of stocks that have similar fundamental characteristics and performance patterns.
It can also be seen as a top-down approach to active equity investing that focuses
on whatever style offers the opportunity to outperform at a particular point in
time
o Style-Based Investing
Value and Growth:. There are different ways to define value and growth stocks,
but the company’s price-to-book (P/B) ratio, which compares the company’s
stock price to the book value per share, is the most commonly used factor.
In addition to P/B ratios, Growth and Value Stocks are sometimes distinguished
by their price-earnings (P/E) ratios and dividend yields.
Value stocks tend to have low P/E and P/B ratios and high dividend yields, while
growth stocks have high P/Es and P/Bs and low dividend yields.
Investors and portfolio managers who buy growth stocks tend to focus on a
company’s earnings.
It is believed that higher earnings growth translates into a higher book value
which, assuming the company’s P/B ratio stays the same, will translate into a
higher stock price.
The risks of owning a growth stock are that earnings, and hence book value,
might not increase as expected or that P/B could decline.
Growth stocks can be further subdivided into those that display consistent
growth in earnings and those that display significant earnings momentum.
o Style-Based Investing
Both of these subgroups generally possess high P/E and P/B multiples
(reflecting potential for future earnings growth) and low dividend yields
(reflecting tendency to re-invest earnings in the business).
Value Stocks: tendency to focus on the company’s share price. Sought, are
stocks trading at prices that reflect a lower-than-justified P/B ratio.
It’s believed, the market will realize this low valuation and, assuming that the
book value remains unchanged, the P/B should rise, which will translate into a
higher stock price.
o Style-Based Investing
Value investors can be grouped into three categories:
• Investors who focus solely on stocks with low P/B ratios – stocks in this
category typically include those of depressed cyclical companies and
companies with low dividend yields and little or no current earnings
• Investors who focus on low P/E ratios, which are typical of stocks in
defensive, cyclical, or out-of-favour industries
• Yield investors who focus on stocks with above-average dividend yields
o Style-Based Investing
Market Capitalization. Another definition of equity style which focuses on
the size of the company as measured by equity market capitalization.
The stocks with the smallest market capitalizations are called small-cap stocks
and those with the largest market capitalizations are called large-cap stocks.
There is no precise definition of what constitutes a small- or large-cap stock; it
depends on the country and the overall market capitalization of the country’s
equity market.
o Style-Based Investing: Market Capitalization
o Non-Style-Based
Focus is not a particular group of stocks but involve a search for stocks with the
best chance of meeting particular objectives. There basically three approaches
are:
• Pure Fundamental
• Pure Quantitative
• Pure Technical
These approaches try to identify the best stocks regardless of style, size, or any
other consideration except, possibly, the stock’s contribution to overall portfolio
risk and diversification
o Non-Style Based Investing - Pure Fundamental
Pure Fundamental. This approach involves analysis of the company’s
historical and projected financial performance and valuation.
Usually involves an in-depth look at the company’s financial statements, with a
focus on earnings growth and cash flow, as well as the quality of the company’s
management and other factors.
The decision to buy or sell a stock is often based on an estimate of the stock’s
true value compared with the stock’s market price.
Approach is related to the value style because stocks are considered for purchase
based on intrinsic value. i.e. inexpensive or true value.
Pure Quantitative. The pure quantitative approach combines historical
fundamental data (earnings, cash flow, book value, etc.) with a statistical
analysis using computer-based models to identify the best stocks according to
specific criteria.
Large investment house employ quantitative analysts who regularly
communicate list of recommended stocks based on their analysis to clients e.g.,
ARM, Stanbic IBTC, Meristem
o Non-Style Based Investing - Pure Quantitative
o Non-Style Based Investing - Pure Technical
This approach assumes that all known market influences are fully reflected in
market prices and that nothing is to be gained by conducting fundamental
analysis.
Technicians analyze historical market action to determine probable future price
trends.
Many large investment dealers employ technical analysts who recommend stocks
based on technical indicators.
• Top-Down Approaches
begins with a focus on the attributes of individual stocks, the top-down approach
begins with an analysis of large scale factors.
A top-down approach may be either :
oMacroeconomic Approach
o Style-based Approach
o Top-Down : Macroeconomic Approach
This traditional top-down approach to selecting stocks begins with macro- and
microeconomic analysis of trends and market forecasts in the global, regional
and national economies.
Then selection of industries or sectors with the potential to outperform other
sectors given the expected economic outlook.
Premise that the fortunes of economic sectors ebb and flow in response to
changes in the economic cycle and that the investor or portfolio manager is able
to pick the sector most likely to experience superior growth.
Such an investor is likely to be characterized a sector rotator or market timer.
o Top-Down : Style-Based Approach
The Style-based Approach selects stocks from whichever style is expected to
perform best given the analysis of the large scale factors and capital market
factors.
At times, this may require a focus on small-cap value stocks, while at other
times it could mean focusing on large-cap growth stocks.
• Passive Equity Portfolio Management
Long-term buy-hold Strategy
Usually tracks an index over time
Designed to match market performance
Manager is judged on how well target index is tracked
• Active Equity Portfolio Management
Attempts at outperforming a passive benchmark portfolio on a risk
adjusted basis
Passive vs. Active Management