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INVESTMENT POLICY STATEMENTS AND ASSET ALLOCATION ISSUES

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Title: INVESTMENT POLICY STATEMENTS AND ASSET ALLOCATION ISSUES


1
Chapter 5
  • INVESTMENT POLICY STATEMENTS AND ASSET ALLOCATION
    ISSUES

2
Chapter 5 Questions
  • What is asset allocation?
  • What are four basic risk management strategies?
  • How and why do investment goals change over a
    persons lifetime and circumstances?
  • What are the four steps in the portfolio
    management process?

3
Chapter 5 Questions
  • Why is a policy statement important to the
    planning process?
  • What objectives and constraints should be
    detailed in the policy statement?
  • Why is investment education necessary?
  • What is the role of asset allocation in
    investment planning?
  • Why do asset allocation strategies differ across
    national boundaries?

4
What is asset allocation?
  • The process of deciding how to distribute wealth
    among asset classes, sectors, and countries for
    investment purposes.
  • Not an isolated choice, but rather a component of
    the portfolio management process.

5
Managing Risk
  • Since risk drives expected return, investing
    involves managing risk rather than managing
    return.

6
Risk Management Strategies
  • Risk Avoidance
  • Can avoid any real chances of loss
  • Generally a poor strategy except for a part of an
    overall portfolio
  • Risk Anticipation
  • Position part of your portfolio to protect
    against anticipated risk factors
  • For example, maintain a cash reserve

7
Risk Management Strategies
  • Risk Transfer
  • Insurance and other investment vehicles can allow
    for the transfer of risk, often at a price, to
    another investor who is willing to bear the risk
  • Risk Reduction
  • Effective diversification and asset allocation
    strategies can reduce risk, sometimes without
    sacrificing expected return.

8
Individual Investor Life Cycle
  • The individual investors life cycle can often be
    described using four separate phases or stages
  • Accumulation Phase
  • Consolidation Phase
  • Spending Phase
  • Gifting Phase

9
Accumulation Phase
  • Early to middle years of careers
  • Attempting to satisfy intermediate and long-term
    goals
  • Net worth is usually small, debt may be heavy
  • Long-term investment horizon means usually
    willing to take moderately high risks in order to
    make above-average returns

10
Consolidation Phase
  • Past career midpoint
  • Have paid off much of their accumulated debt
  • Earnings now exceed living expenses, so the
    balance can be invested
  • Time horizon is still long-term, so moderately
    high risk investments are still attractive

11
Spending Phase
  • Usually begins at retirement
  • Saving before, prudent spending now
  • Living expenses covered by Social Security and
    retirement plans
  • Changing emphasis toward preservation of capital,
    but still want investment values to keep pace
    with inflation

12
Gifting Phase
  • Can be concurrent with spending phase
  • If resources allow, individuals can now use
    excess assets to provide gifts to other
    individuals or organizations
  • Estate planning becomes important, especially tax
    considerations

13
The Portfolio Management Process
  • A four step process
  • Construct a policy statement
  • Study current financial conditions and forecast
    future trends
  • Construct a portfolio
  • Monitor needs and conditions

14
The Portfolio Management Process
  • 1. Policy statement
  • Specifies investment goals and acceptable risk
    levels
  • The road map that guides all investment
    decisions

15
The Portfolio Management Process
  • 2. Study current financial and economic
    conditions and forecast future trends
  • Determine strategies that should meet goals
    within the expected environment
  • Requires monitoring and updates since financial
    markets are ever-changing

16
The Portfolio Management Process
  • 3. Construct the portfolio
  • Given the policy statement and the expected
    conditions, go about investing
  • Allocate available funds to meet goals while
    managing risk

17
The Portfolio Management Process
  • 4. Monitor and update
  • Revise policy statement as needed
  • Monitor changing financial and economic
    conditions
  • Evaluate portfolio performance
  • Modify portfolio investments accordingly

18
The Policy Statement
  • Understand and articulate realistic goals
  • Know yourself
  • Know the risks and potential rewards from
    investments
  • Learn about standards for evaluating portfolio
    performance
  • Know how to judge average performance
  • Adjust for risk

19
The Policy Statement
  • Dont try to navigate without a map!
  • Important Inputs
  • Investment Objectives
  • Investment Constraints

20
Investment Objectives
  • Need to specify return and risk objectives
  • Need to consider the risk tolerance of the
    investor
  • Return goals need to be consistent with risk
    tolerance
  • These will change over time

21
Investment Objectives
  • Possible broad goals
  • Capital preservation
  • Maintain purchasing power
  • Minimize the risk of loss
  • Capital appreciation
  • Achieve portfolio growth through capital gains
  • Accept greater risk

22
Investment Objectives
  • Current income
  • Look to generate income rather than capital gains
  • May be preferred in spending phase
  • Relatively low risk
  • Total return
  • Combining income returns and reinvestment with
    capital gains
  • Moderate risk

23
Investment Constraints
  • These factors may limit or at least impact the
    investment choices
  • Liquidity needs
  • How soon will the money be needed?
  • Time horizon
  • How able is the investor to ride out several bad
    years?
  • Legal and Regulatory Factors
  • Legal restrictions often constrain decisions
  • Retirement regulations

24
Investment Constraints
  • Tax Concerns
  • Realized capital gains vs. Ordinary income?
  • Taxable vs. Tax-exempt bonds?
  • Regular IRA vs. Roth IRA?
  • 401(k) and 403(b) plans
  • Unique needs and preferences
  • Perhaps the investor wishes to avoid types of
    investments for ethical reasons

25
Investment Education
  • The type of information necessary to construct a
    good policy statement is neither common sense
    or common knowledge.
  • Many investors fail to diversify.
  • Many fail to plan completely.
  • Data indicates that many Americans have greatly
    under-invested for the future.
  • The bottom line If you do not plan for the
    future, you will likely not be prepared for it.

26
Asset Allocation Decisions
  • Four decisions in an investment strategy
  • What asset classes should be considered?
  • What should be the normal weight for each asset
    class?
  • What are the allowable ranges for the weights?
  • What specific securities should be purchased?

27
The Importance of Asset Allocation
  • The asset allocation decision (which classes and
    at what weights) is very important. Using fund
    data
  • About 90 of return variability over time can be
    explained by asset allocation.
  • About 40 of the differences between returns can
    be explained by differences in asset allocation.
  • Asset allocation is thus the major factor that
    drives portfolio risk and return.

28
Risk/Return History and Asset Allocation
  • Looking at return data on various asset classes
    indicate some important factors for investors
  • Over long time horizons, stocks have always
    outperformed low-risk investments.
  • So the additional risk of stock investing (higher
    return standard deviations) over shorter time
    horizons seems to all but disappear over time.
  • Need to consider real investment returns over
    taxes and costs

29
Asset Allocation and Cultural Differences
  • Differences in social, political, and tax
    environments influence asset allocation.
  • For instance, 58 of pension fund assets are
    invested in equities in the U.S.
  • 78 in equities in United Kingdom, where high
    average inflation impacts this choice
  • 8 in equities in Germany, where generous
    government pensions and greater risk aversion
    seem to play a strong role
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