Title: CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR
1CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR
- PORTFOLIO PERFORMANCE EVALUATION
2MEASURES OF RETURN
- MEASURES OF RETURN
- complicated by addition or withdrawal of money by
the investor - percentage change is not reliable when the base
amount may be changing - timing of additions or withdrawals is important
to measurement
3MEASURES OF RETURN
- TWO MEASURES OF RETURN
- Dollar-Weighted Returns
- uses discounted cash flow approach
- weighted because the period with the greater
number of shares has a greater influence on the
overall average
4MEASURES OF RETURN
- TWO MEASURES OF RETURN
- Time-Weighted Returns
- used when cash flows occur between beginning and
ending of investment horizon - ignores number of shares held in each period
5MEASURES OF RETURN
- TWO MEASURES OF RETURN
- Comparison of Time-Weighted to Dollar-Weighted
Returns - Time-weighted useful in pension fund management
where manager cannot control the deposits or
withdrawals to the fund
6MAKING RELEVANT COMPARISONS
- PERFORMANCE
- should be evaluated on the basis of a relative
and not an absolute basis - this is done by use of a benchmark portfolio
- BENCHMARK PORTFOLIO
- should be relevant and feasible
- reflects objectives of the fund
- reflects return as well as risk
7THE USE OF MARKET INDICES
- INDICES
- are used to indicate performance but depend upon
- the securities used to calculate them
- the calculation weighting measures
8THE USE OF MARKET INDICES
- INDICES
- Three Calculation Weighting Methods
- price weighting
- sum prices and divided by a constant to determine
average price - EXAMPLE THE DOW JONES INDICES
9THE USE OF MARKET INDICES
- INDICES
- Three Calculation Weighting Methods
- value weighting (capitalization method)
- price times number of shares outstanding is
summed - divide by beginning value of index
- EXAMPLE
- SP500
- WILSHIRE 5000
- RUSSELL 1000
10THE USE OF MARKET INDICES
- INDICES
- Three Calculation Weighting Methods
- equal weighting
- multiply the level of the index on the previous
day by the arithmetic mean of the daily price
relatives - EXAMPLE
- VALUE LINE COMPOSITE
11ARITHMETIC V. GEOMETRIC AVERAGES
- GEOMETRIC MEAN FRAMEWORK
- GM (P HPR)1/N - 1
- where P the summation of the product of
- HPR the holding period returns
- n the number of periods
-
-
12ARITHMETIC V. GEOMETRIC AVERAGES
- GEOMETRIC MEAN FRAMEWORK
- measures past performance well
- represents exactly the constant rate of return
needed to earn in each year to match some
historical performance
13ARITHMETIC V. GEOMETRIC AVERAGES
- ARITHMETIC MEAN FRAMEWORK
- provides a good indication of the expected rate
of return for an investment during a future
individual year - it is biased upward if you attempt to measure an
assets long-run performance
14RISK-ADJUSTED MEASURES OF PERFORMANCE
- THE REWARD TO VOLATILITLY RATIO (TREYNOR MEASURE)
- There are two components of risk
- risk associated with market fluctuations
- risk associated with the stock
- Characteristic Line (ex post security line)
- defines the relationship between historical
portfolio returns and the market portfolio
15TREYNOR MEASURE
- TREYNOR MEASURE
- Formula
- where arp the average portfolio return
- arf the average risk free rate
- bp the slope of the characteristic
- line during the time period
16TREYNOR MEASURE
SML
arp
bp
17TREYNOR MEASURE
- CHARACTERISTIC LINE
- slope of CL
- measures the relative volatility of portfolio
returns in relation to returns for the aggregate
market, i.e. the portfolios beta - the higher the slope, the more sensitive is the
portfolio to the market
18TREYNOR MEASURE
SML
arp
bp
19THE SHARPE RATIO
- THE REWARD TO VARIABILITY (SHARPE RATIO)
- measure of risk-adjusted performance that uses a
benchmark based on the ex-post security market
line - total risk is measured by sp
20THE SHARPE RATIO
- SHARPE RATIO
- formula
- where SR the Sharpe ratio
- sp the total risk
21THE SHARPE RATIO
- SHARPE RATIO
- indicates the risk premium per unit of total risk
- uses the Capital Market Line in its analysis
22THE SHARPE RATIO
CML
arp
sp
23THE JENSEN MEASURE OF PORTFOLIO PERFORMANCE
- BASED ON THE CAPM EQUATION
- measures the average return on the portfolio over
and above that predicted by the CAPM - given the portfolios beta and the average market
return
24THE JENSEN MEASURE OF PORTFOLIO PERFORMANCE
- THE JENSEN MEASURE
- known as the portfolios alpha value
- recall the linear regression equation
- y a bx e
- alpha is the intercept
25THE JENSEN MEASURE OF PORTFOLIO PERFORMANCE
- DERIVATION OF ALPHA
- Let the expectations formula in terms of realized
rates of return be written - subtracting RFR from both sides
26THE JENSEN MEASURE OF PORTFOLIO PERFORMANCE
- DERIVATION OF ALPHA
- in this form an intercept value for the
regression is not expected if all assets are in
equilibrium - in words, the risk premium earned on the jth
portfolio is equal to bj times a market risk
premium plus a random error term
27THE JENSEN MEASURE OF PORTFOLIO PERFORMANCE
- DERIVATION OF ALPHA
- to measure superior portfolio performance, you
must allow for an intercept a - a superior manager has a significant and positive
alpha because of constant positive random errors
28COMPARING MEASURES OF PERFORMANCE
- TREYNOR V. SHARPE
- SR measures uses s as a measure of risk while
Treynor uses b - SR evaluates the manager on the basis of both
rate of return performance as well as
diversification
29COMPARING MEASURES OF PERFORMANCE
- for a completely diversified portfolio
- SR and Treynor give identical rankings because
total risk is really systematic variance - any difference in ranking comes directly from a
difference in diversification
30CRITICISM OF RISK-ADJUSTED PERFORMANCE MEASURES
- Use of a market surrogate
- Roll criticized any measure that attempted to
model the market portfolio with a surrogate such
as the SP500 - it is almost impossible to form a portfolio whose
returns replicate those over time - making slight changes in the surrogate may
completely change performance rankings
31CRITICISM OF RISK-ADJUSTED PERFORMANCE MEASURES
- measuring the risk free rate
- using T-bills gives too low of a return making it
easier for a portfolio to show superior
performance - borrowing a T-bill rate is unrealistically low
and produces too high a rate of return making it
more difficult to show superior performance
32