Term
Direct Exchange Rate 100 Yen/$ = |
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Definition
Price in local currency of a unit of foreign currency 100 Yen/$ = 100 DC/FC |
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Term
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Definition
In competitive markets, prices of identical products must be equal or within transactions cost bounds |
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Term
PPP (Absolute) and Problems |
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Definition
S = e(A/B) = (P of A)/(P of B) Assumes free and frictionless trade Ignores transportation costs/tariffs/quotas Baskets of Goods may vary |
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Term
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Definition
Exchange rate btw two countries adjusts to reflect change in the price levels between the two. Spot is not based on the PPP between the two countries |
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Term
π^A π^B S0 = e(A/B)sub0 St = e(A/B)subt |
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Definition
Inflation rate per period in Country A Inflation rate per period in Country B Exchange rate at time 0 Exchange rate at time t |
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Term
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Definition
St = P0A(1+πA)T
-------------
P0B(1+πB)T |
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Term
Percentage change in the exchange rate
(Little x) |
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Definition
πA - πB
------------
1+πB
If πB is small, then x = πA - πB
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Term
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Definition
S0* (1+πDC)
------
(1+ πFC) |
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Term
PPP
Short vs Long Term
Monetary Shocks |
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Definition
PPP doesnt hold in short run but it can still hold in long run
Monetary Shocks have immediate effects on exchange rate but slow effects on economy
therefore Capital markets adjust faster than commodity markets |
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Term
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Definition
(1+i) = (1+r)(1+π)
~ i = r + π |
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Term
Fisher Effect across countries |
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Definition
1+iA = 1+πA
------ ------
1+iB = 1+πB
~ iA- iB = πA - πB |
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Term
Uncovered Interest Parity |
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Definition
(1+iA) = St+1/St(1+iB)
It is an unhedged investment
No guarantee that
return on foreign investment = domestic IR on investment of identical risk |
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Term
Spot $/DM: .58
Forward $/DM: .5913
Spot 1 yr later $/DM: .59
Investor 1: Purchase 1 yr US Bond with 5% Interest
Investor 2: Exchange $ for DM and buy a 1 yr GER bond with 3% interest
Which investor is better off? (UIP) |
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Definition
(1 + iA) = .59/.58*(1+.03)
= 1.048
Investor 1 is better off |
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Term
Forward Rate
&
Forward Premium |
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Definition
F = E(St+1)
If condition is violated, arbitrage opportunity
Forward premium = (Ft - St) |
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Term
Covered Interest Rate Parity |
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Definition
(1+iA) = Ft/St(1+iB)
CIP = relation between return on hedged investment in foreign currency in terms of domestic currency
Guarantees return on foreign investment = domestic interest rate of identical risk |
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Term
Spot $/DM: .58
Forward $/DM: .5913
Spot 1 yr later $/DM: .59
Investor 1: Purchase 1 yr US Bond with 5% Interest
Investor 2: Exchange $ for DM and buy a 1 yr GER bond with 3% interest and takes short position in DM forward contract
Which investor is better off? (CIP) |
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Definition
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Term
When Does International Diversification
Matter |
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Definition
Stock Markets are volatile
Stock markets across countries are not positively correlated |
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Term
Volatilities:
Developed vs Emerging Markets
Bull vs Bear |
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Definition
Volatility of returns in developing markets is higher than in developed markets
Volatility in bear markets is higher than in bull markets |
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Term
Correlations
Developed vs Emerging
Bull vs Bear
Recession vs Expansion |
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Definition
Correlations among developed markets are > among developing markets
Correlations in bear markets are > in bull markets
Correlations in recession periods are > in expansion periods |
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Term
Global vs Domestic Efficient Frontier |
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Definition
Global has a higher efficient frontier where it can produce either more return for equal risk or equal return for less risk |
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Term
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Definition
|
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Term
Currency Risk in diversified portfolio |
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Definition
Not Major because:
Market & Currency risk are not highly correlated
Currency risk can be elimnated by a position in a derivative contract
Currency risk in the global portfolio is substantially diversified away
Currency risk is smaller at loner investment horizons |
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Term
Internation Portfolio Performance depends on |
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Definition
Investment Strategy
Country Selection
Time-Period |
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Term
Global Equity Asset Allocation |
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Definition
Must first define the efficient allocation among:
Domestic market
Developing Markets
Emerging Markets
Then take the mean-varience based on historical data |
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Term
Case Against International Diversification |
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Definition
Increase in correlations
It is based on histroical performances
Doesn't take into account:
Familiarity, Political Risk, Market Efficiency, Regulations, Transaction Costs, Taxes, and
Currency Risk |
|
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Term
Investing in Foreign Stocks |
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Definition
Investors can exploit less than perfect positive correlations by
Purchasing foreigh shares directly in foreign market
Purchasing foreign listed shares in the domestic market (ADR) |
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Term
|
Definition
Cost of trading foreign shares
Higher in emerging markets but are generally declining over time |
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Term
International Portfolio Mgmt
Passive vs Active |
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Definition
Passive - no or infrequent re-balancing
Active - frequent re-balancing
Transaction costs can make passive portfolios APPEAR more preferable to active ones
Not true anymore due to technology |
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Term
ADR
American Depository Receipts |
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Definition
A certificate issued by a US depositary bank, representing foreign shares held by trhe bank, usually by a branch or correspondent in the country of issue
Carries same currency, political and economic risks as the underlying foreign share |
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Term
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Definition
Avoid administrative problems of converting US dollars to purchase foreign stock
Shorter settlement period
Recieve dividends that are converted automatically to US dollar at the preferential wholesale exchange rate |
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Term
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Definition
Limited number of companies have ADRs
Tend to be large companies in home country and thus do not offer full international diversification benefit
Execution costs maybe higher on US than on location markets |
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Term
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Definition
Closed-end fund whose assets consist of primarily of stocks of the country for which the fund is named
Offers access to a local market and benefit form international diversification
Subject to local gov't aapproval: way to overcome foreign investment restrictions |
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Term
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Definition
Special open-end funds that trade on a stock market but are shares of a portfolio not individual company
Benefit of international diversification
Liquidity at a low cost
Designed to be tax efficient |
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Term
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Definition
Monitor economic, social and political variables
-Real growth, monetary policy, fiscal policy
In the long run, real economic growth is major influence on national stock market
-Business Cycle and Long-term sustainable growth
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Term
Industry Analysis
4 Elements |
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Definition
Demand analysis
Value Creation
Industry Life Cycle
Competition |
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Term
Industry Analysis: Demand Analysis |
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Definition
Estimate sensitivity of sales to global and national GDP changes |
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Term
Industry Analysis: Value Creation |
|
Definition
Learning/Experience curve
Economies of scale
Economies of scope
Network Externalities |
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Term
Industry Analysis: Industry Life Cycle |
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Definition
Pioneer Stage
Rapid Accelerating Growth Stage
Mature Growth Stage
Stabilization Growth
Deceleration of Growth |
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Term
Industry Analysis: Competition Elements |
|
Definition
Competition Structure
Competition Advantage
Competition Strategy |
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Term
Competition Structure Valuation |
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Definition
N Firm concentration ratio: Combined market shares of X largest firms in industry
Herfindahl Index: Sqaured Markets shares of firms in industry |
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Term
Competitive Advantage Analysis |
|
Definition
Factor Conditions
Demand conditions
Related Supplier and Support Industries
Strategy Structure and Rivalry |
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Term
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Definition
Set of actions that a firm takes to optimize future competitive position
Porter's classification: Cost Leadership vs Differentiation |
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Term
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Definition
Participants along value change compete but also cooperate to produce mutually beneficial results
Caution: Participants may be good in a good economy and staunch in a bad economy |
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Term
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Definition
Investment Strategy based on the premis that different industries behave differntly over the business cycle |
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Term
Industry Analysis: Risk Elements |
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Definition
Market Competition
Value Chain Competition
Government Participation
Cash Flow Covariance |
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Term
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Definition
Should be carried out in the context of the country and the global industry
Global industry factors tend now to dominate country factors |
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Term
Industry Valuation Approach |
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Definition
Ratio Analysis
-DuPont model
Discounted Cash Flow Models
-Gordon Dividen Discount
Analysts try to find mispriced securities |
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Term
Role of Market Efficiency |
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Definition
Equate Fundamental value with asset valuation |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
|
Definition
- Low P/E
Strategy usually purchases defensive, cyclical, or out-of-favor industry
- Contrarian
Strategy focuses on stock with low valuations relative to book value
-Yield
Strategy focuses on above average earnings or dividend yields that are expected to maintain dividend payouts |
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Term
|
Definition
-Consistent Growth
Strategy focuses on high quality firms with continually growing earnings primarily in consumer-oriented industries
-Earnings Momentum
Strategy tends to purchase stocks with the anticipation of earnings acceleration |
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Term
|
Definition
-Focuses on price component
-Do not care about current earnings
-Assumes P/E ratio is below its natural level
-Assets/CF are unpriced and market will realize soon
-Multiple will return to market levels
Overreaction to bad news
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Term
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Definition
Focuses on EPS and its economic determinants
Looks for companies expected to have rapid EPS growth
Assumes constant P/E ratio
Earnings will grow more than market consensus expects
Earnings have momentum |
|
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Term
Value vs Growth Investors |
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Definition
Value investor will buy and sell a stock earlier than a growth investor |
|
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Term
Risks for Value & Growth Investors |
|
Definition
Value
- Investor misreads the 'cheapness' of the stock
-Market did not overreact to the bad news
Growth
- Future earnings growth does not occur
-P/E ratio declines for some unexpected reason |
|
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Term
|
Definition
Does not have a particular preference for value or growth and tends to hold portfolios that closely resemble broad market averages
Substyles: Value or Growth Bias
Substyles: Market-Normal |
|
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Term
|
Definition
-Large Cap stocks are efficiently priced
Lots of analysts
Lots of institutional money eager of good information
-Mid and Small Cap stocks are inefficiently priced
Few Analysts
Difficult to estimate their earnings
Little is known about these stocks
Research can uncover mispricing |
|
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Term
CAPM, APT, and style investing |
|
Definition
Market risk (beta) is all that matters
All firm-sepcific risk can be fully diversified
Different investing styles would not produce differential returns
Style investing should not work |
|
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Term
Reason for style existance |
|
Definition
- Returns are significantly different from market
- Actual styles portfolio returns and style index returns must differ from each other
- Actual style portfolios and style indexes must have different factor exposures between themselves and the overall market
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Term
|
Definition
Are benchmarks for managers and plan management therefore can be corruptable |
|
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Term
|
Definition
Used to develop a passive value or growth strategy
Is appropriate for investors who have:
Low risk tolerace
Short Time Horizon
Multiple parties to whom they need to explain performance results
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Term
|
Definition
-Factors
- Size is measured by market capitalization
- Growth/Value is forcasted on one year earnings
-Method
- Size: Rank orders on market cap
- Growth/Value: Rank orders on Price/Book
-Problems
- Firm might be growth in one time period and value in another
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|
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Term
Style Mgmt: A Global View |
|
Definition
Styles exist globally
Problems with using style investing
- Notions of style are less well know
-Managers do not see themselves in terms of style
-Multi-national portfolios are difficult to classify in terms of style
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Term
|
Definition
Growth stocks outperform value stocks for a time and then the opposite occures
Overtime, value stocks have higher returns than growth
Variation in returns among mutual funds are attrituable to differences in style |
|
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Term
Why country returns are so different |
|
Definition
- Indexes are constructed differently
- A portion of national equity index behavior is influenced by exchange rate changes
- Different countries have different industrial structures
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Term
|
Definition
Proportion of the given industry representation in a country's economy
Important for explaining cross-sectional differences in volatility and the correlation structure of country index returns |
|
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Term
Return Generation Process |
|
Definition
Separate country-specific shock from the industry shock
R = Alpha + omega + theta + error
omega = pure industry i effect
therta = pure country j effect
error = firm specific fluctuation |
|
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Term
Country and Industry Effects |
|
Definition
Country and industry effects are estimated from:
Rk = alpha + omega1*Dk1 + ... + omega1DkI + theta1*Ck1 + ... + theta*Ckj + error
Dki = 1 if firm k belonds to industry i
Ckj =1 if firm k belonds to country j
Result = time series of industry and country effects |
|
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Term
Economic Problem of
Time series regression of industry and country effects |
|
Definition
Number of identified industry groups differs widely across countries
Many firms may belong to more than one industry
Multinational firms belong to more than one country |
|
|
Term
Estimation Problem of
Time series regression of industry and country effects |
|
Definition
Each firm belongs to both one industry and one country
= Multicollinearity problem
Solution: Measure industry and country effects relative to the common factor (e.g.) World equally weighted index |
|
|
Term
Interpretation of
Time series regression of industry and country effects |
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Definition
Each omegai = excess return over the world equally-weighted index on a portfolio that invests only in industry i
Each thetaj = excess return over the world equally-weighted index on a portfolio that invests only in country j |
|
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Term
Country Vs Industry Effects |
|
Definition
Stocks from same domestic market but different industries are closer substitutes than stocks from the same industry but in different countries
Benefits of international diversification are from geographical diversification and not industrial diversification |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Two Stage Portfolio Selection
+
Assumption |
|
Definition
Stage one: Allocate portfolio to several countries
Stage two: Use industry analysis to select most attractive stocks
Assumption: International returns are driven by country factors |
|
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Term
Internationally Traded vs Internationally Non-Traded Goods |
|
Definition
If goods are not internationally traded, country factors explain a larger proportion of variation in their returns
If goods are internationally traded, industry factors explain a larger proportion of variation in their returns |
|
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Term
Two Opposing Forces in Industry factors and Country factors |
|
Definition
- Worldwide growth in demand for goods in a particular industry will benefit all firms within the industry
-Due to competition, if one major firm is highly successful, it will be at expense of other firms in the same industry |
|
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Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Identifying Global Industry Shocks |
|
Definition
- Regress Global industry return on the world index return
- Regress residuals on country index returns
- Residual v is pure global industry shock
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|
|
Term
Identifying Country Shocks |
|
Definition
- Regress Country industry return on the world index return
- Regress residuals on global index returns
- Residual v is pure country shock
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|
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Term
|
Definition
Does not provide any substantial value in the U.S.
True sector rotation is a valid approach to investing only when country-specific effects are eliminated
Only glbal diversification is possible to eliminate country risk |
|
|
Term
Case for Emerging Markets |
|
Definition
Higher Expected Return
Higher local risks
Positive correlation with developed markets |
|
|
Term
Case Against Emerging Markets (Volatility) |
|
Definition
Volatility
- Much larger than that of developed markets
-Investment risk in emerging economies often comes from the possibility of a crisis
-Factors to consider: Political, Social, Existing infrastructure, Corruption, Banking Sector |
|
|
Term
Case Against Emerging Markets (Correlations + Currency Risk) |
|
Definition
Correlations: Tend to increase in periods of crises and emerging markets are subject to large periodic crises
Currency Risk: Tend to exhibit a positive correlation with value of their currencies |
|
|
Term
Emerging Markets Return Performance |
|
Definition
Emerging markets grow at a higher rate than developed nations
Emerging markets have become more efficient
BUT, they tend to be segmented and mispricing is evident |
|
|
Term
Efficient Market Assumtion |
|
Definition
Asset prices are assumed to be efficient
Any new information is reflected in prices
Any typical investor could consider an asset price to reflect its true fundamental value |
|
|
Term
Integration vs Sementation |
|
Definition
Integration: Efficent because prices do not violate the law of one price
Segmentation: Inefficent because prices violate the law of one price |
|
|
Term
Impediments to Capital Mobility |
|
Definition
- Not integrated but segmented because of various impediments to capital mobility
- e.g. Psychological barriers, legal restrictions, transaction costs, discriminatory taxation, politial risks, foreign currency risks
- Reduce international capital flows and lead to segmented markets. More apparent in emerging markets
- Flow of foreign investment has grown over time
- Conclusion: International markets are not fully segmented but need to look at international asset pricing
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Term
|
Definition
Risk-averse
Expected Return and risk for all assets is assumed correct
Investors care about nominal returns
Risk free IR exist with unlimited borrowing and lending
No Transactions costs or taxes
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|
|
Term
Separation Theorem for domestric CAPM |
|
Definition
CAPM, investors determine their demands for each asset by a mean-variance optimization
Domestic CAPM states that investors hold: Risk free asset and market portfolio made up from assets traded in proportion to their market cap. |
|
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Term
Domestic CAPM Conclusions |
|
Definition
Optimal Investment Strategy for any investor is a combination of two portfolios (Market and Risk-free)
E(R) = Rf + B(Rm - Rf) |
|
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Term
|
Definition
Similar to domestic CAPM, but World market portfolio replaces the domestic market portfolio
Not reasonable since, investors throughout the world do not have identical consumption baskets
Real prices of goods are not identical in every country |
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Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Real Exchange Rate Movements |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Assumption:
- Nationals of a country care about returns and risks in their home currency
- CAPM holds
- All investors determine their demand for each asset by a mean-variance optimization using domestic currency as base currency
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|
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Term
Foreign Currency Risk Premium |
|
Definition
SRP defined as E(RDOM) - rDC
SRP = E(s) - (RDC - RFC) |
|
|
Term
Expected Return on Foreign investment
Unhedged vs Hedged |
|
Definition
Hedged
E(RDOM) = E(RFC) + E(s)
E(s) = E(S1 - S0)/S0
Unhedged
E(RDOM) = E(RFC) + (F0 - S0)/S0
|
|
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Term
|
Definition
- Market and currency risk factors are unstable over time
- Market imperfections are much more sever at the international level
- Definition of a world market portfolio is extremely complicated
- World is not perfectly integrated
|
|
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Term
|
Definition
If:
- Access to both capital markets by residents of both countries is unrestricted
- To assets which belong to these two countries have the same risk and same expected return
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
- High correlation between two markets indicates a high degree of their integration but neither implies the other
- Higher if Market Cap to GDP is high
- Higher if exports and imports to GDP is high
|
|
|
Term
Test Results of the ICAPM |
|
Definition
- Current research tends to support conclusion that assets are priced in an integrated global financial market
- Evidence justifies using ICAPM as anchor to structuring global portfolios
- In emerging smaller markets, evidence points that constraints are still serious
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Term
|
Definition
A contract whereby two parties agree to a periodic exchange of CFs
On each swap payment date, the two CFs are netted and a payment is made by the part owing the money
OTC and there is no secondary sap market
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Term
|
Definition
Currency
Interest Rate
Currency & Interest Rate |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Return and Risk
Reducing financing costs
Manage exposure to currency and IR Risks |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Method 1 (Bonds): Vswap = BD - S0BF
Method 2 (Forwards):
- Calculate Forward rates using zero rates
- Calculate swap CFs in FC assuming forward will be realized
- Discount Swap CFs using zero rates to obtain swap value
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|
|
Term
Hedging with Currency futures and forwards |
|
Definition
Primarily used to protect a portfolio against currency risks
Objective: Minimize exposure to exchange rate movement
Formula on Sheet |
|
|
Term
Minimum-Variance Hedge Ratio |
|
Definition
Objective: Search for minimum variability in the value of the hedged portfolio
Investors would set hedge ratio so as to minimize the variance of the return on the hedged portfolio |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
h* = 1 + cover(R,S)/os2
First part = translation risk hedge
Comes from translating value of asset from FC to DC
Second part = economic risk hedge
Comes from FI reacting to exchange rate movement |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Minimum Variance is not always optimal in risk-return framework
Basis risk can also affect quality of currency hedging
- movement in basis could correlate with movement in spot exchange rate |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Short-term contracts
Roll over Short term hedges
Long Term Contracts
Roll over short-term contracts
Match contract maturity to expected period of hedge
Use long term hedges
|
|
|
Term
Hedging Multiple currencies |
|
Definition
Used for closely linked currencies
Reduces total volatility of portfolio
Complete FC hedge can be achieved by heding investments in each FC |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Exploit asymmetric risk-return characteristic of an option |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Option covers every dollar loss with a dollar gain |
|
|
Term
Global Performance Evaluation |
|
Definition
Performance Measurement
Returns are calculated over a measurement period for overall portfolio and verious segments
Performance Attribution
Total portfolio performance is attributed
Performance Appraisal
Judgement is formulated on Investment manager's skill |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Captures return on average invested capital
Measures net enrichment of the client
Aka IRR or average return |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Performance per dollar invested
Calculated independently of CF to or from portfolio
Obtained by chainlinking rate of return between CF date |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
MWR
Useful for measuring return f invested capital
Gives assesment of client's net enrichment
TWR
Preferred method for measuring and comparing the performance of money managers
Useful for performance evaluation |
|
|
Term
Global Performance Attribution |
|
Definition
Global portfolio can be invested in many different local markets and currencies
Breakdown portfolio into various segments according to type of asset and currency |
|
|
Term
Components of Global Performance Attribution |
|
Definition
Security Selection
Asset Allocation
- Market Allocation
- Currency Allocation
Other
- Market Timing
- Industry
- Styles |
|
|
Term
Total Return Decomposition Box |
|
Definition
Portfolio Weights
Rate of Return in $
Capital gain in local currency
Currency Contribution
Market Index
Security Selection
|
|
|
Term
Attribution Decomposition
|
|
Definition
Benchmark return +
Market allocation contribution +
Currency allocation contribution +
Security selection contribution
Portfolio Return |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Investor decides asset allocation accross various asset classes based on E(r) and risk
Actively managed portfolio is constructed for each asset class and a benchmark assigned |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Absolute: Standard Deviation
Relative: Tracking Error/Active risk |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Sharpe
Treynor Ratio
Jensen's Alpha |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Excess Return from Benchmark divided by tracking error |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Infrequently traded assets
Option-like investment strategies
Survivor bias: risk and return |
|
|
Term
Factors affecting Global Decision Process |
|
Definition
View of world regardign security price behavior
Strengths in terms of research and mgmt
Cost Aspects
Location and domestic/globa marketing strategy |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Reproduce market index of securities
Assumes market portfolio is efficient
Uses:
Full replication
Stratified sampling
Optimization sampling
Synthetic replication |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Benchmark is often imposted and it will clearly guide structure of portfolio
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Top-Down: Allocates assets across asset classes then selects individual securities to satisfy allocation
Bottom-Up: Manager studies the fundamentals of many individual stocks and then selects the best securities |
|
|
Term
Investment Policy Statement |
|
Definition
IPS is the cornerstone of the portfolio mgmt process
Includes:
Client Description and Purpose
Return and risk Objectives
Constraints
Asset Allocation Considerations
Schedule for review and monitoring
|
|
|
Term
|
Definition
Define Asset Classes
Formulating long-term expectations used in strategic asset allocation
Formulating short-term expectations used in tactical asset allocation |
|
|
Term
Short-Term vs Long-Term Expectations |
|
Definition
Short: Tactical devations from the strategic asset allocation
Long: Historical returns + Forward-looking returns |
|
|
Term
Strategic Asset Allocation |
|
Definition
Conducting asset allocation optimization using long-term capital market expectations
Three important issues:
Scope of the benchmark
Set of weights chosen
Attitude toward currency risk |
|
|
Term
Tactical Asset Allocation |
|
Definition
Deciding which asset classes are currently attractively or unattractively priced
Making short-term departures from the long-term policy by buyin more off attractive markets and reducing unattractive markets |
|
|
Term
Components of Foreign Bond Investments |
|
Definition
Foreign Yield
Capital Gain/Loss
Currency Gain/Loss |
|
|
Term
Risk on Forgieng Bond Investments |
|
Definition
Interest Rate risk
Currency Risk
Expectede return on forign bond = domestic risk free rate + risk premium
Risk Premium = Spread of Foregn bond yield + % capital gain/loss + expected % currency movement |
|
|