Title: Lecture%20Presentation%20to%20accompany%20Investment%20Analysis%20
1Chapter 2 The Asset Allocation Decision
2Individual Investor Life Cycle
Exhibit 2.1
Net Worth
Consolidation Phase Long-term
Retirement Short-term Vacations Childrens
College
Accumulation Phase Long-term Retirement
Childrens college Short-term House Car
Spending Phase Gifting Phase Long-term Estate
Planning Short-term Lifestyle Needs Gifts
Age
3The Portfolio Management Process
Exhibit 2.2
- 1. Policy statement (road map)- Focus Investors
short-term and long-term needs, familiarity with
capital market history, and expectations - 2. Examine current and projected financial,
economic, political, and social conditions -
Focus Short-term and intermediate-term expected
conditions to use in constructing a specific
portfolio - 3. Implement the plan by constructing the
portfolio - Focus Meet the investors needs at
the minimum risk levels - 4. Feedback loop Monitor and update investor
needs, environmental conditions, portfolio
performance
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5Input to the policy statement
- Investment objectives expressed in terms of risk
and return - Risk Tolerance
- Psychological makeup
- Insurance coverage
- Cash reserves
- Family situation
- Age
- Current net worth
- Income expectations
6- Investment objectives expressed in terms of risk
and return - Return objective
- Absolute or relative percentage return
- General goals
7- General Goals
- Capital preservation
- minimize risk of real loss
- Capital appreciation
- Growth of the portfolio in real terms to meet
future need
8- General Goals
- Total return
- Increase portfolio value by capital gains and by
reinvesting current income - Maintain moderate risk exposure
- Income generation
- Focus is in generating income rather than capital
gains
9Risk Categories and Suggested Asset Allocations
for Merrill Lynch Clients
Exhibit 2.3
10Risk Categories and Suggested Asset Allocations
for Merrill Lynch Clients
Exhibit 2.3
11How Much Risk is Right for You?
Exhibit 2.4
12Investment Constraints
- Liquidity needs
- Vary between investors depending upon age,
employment, tax status, etc. - Time horizon
- Influences liquidity needs and risk tolerance
(longer time horizon faces less liquidity and
larger risk)
13Investment Constraints
- Tax concerns
- Capital gains/losses or income distributions?
- Unrealized vs realized capital gain
- Trade-off between taxes and diversification (use
employee payroll deduction plans or 401k to buy
company stocks)
14Investment Constraints
- Tax concerns (continued)
- interest on municipal bonds exempt from federal
income tax and from state of issue - interest on federal securities exempt from state
income tax - contributions to an IRA may qualify as deductible
from taxable income - tax deferral considerations - compounding
15Equivalent Taxable Yield
16Effect of Tax Deferral on Investor Wealth over
Time
Exhibit 2.6
Investment Value
10,062.66
5,365.91
1,000
Time
Marginal tax28, after-tax return5.768
(1-28)
17Methods of Tax Deferral (for US)
- Regular IRA contributions tax deductible
- Tax on returns deferred until withdrawal
- Roth IRA contributions not tax deductible
- tax-free on returns possible
- Cash value life insurance funds accumulate
tax-free until they are withdrawn - Tax Sheltered Annuities
- Employers 401(k) and 403(b) plans tax-deferred
investments
18Historical Average Annual Returns and Return
Variability, 1926-2001
Exhibit 2.9
19Over Long Time Periods, Equities Offer Higher
Returns
Exhibit 2.10
20Returns and Risk of Different Asset Classes
- Historically, small company stocks have generated
the higher returns. But the volatility of
returns have been higher too. - Inflation and taxes have a major impact on
returns. - Returns on Treasury Bills have barely kept pace
with inflation.
21- Extra reading
- Appendix of Chapter 2 Objectives and
Constraints of Institutional Investors (pages
63-66) - Mutual Funds
- Pension funds
- Endowment funds
- Insurance companies
- Banks