Portfolio Performance Evaluation Part A-2
Portfolio Performance Evaluation Part A-2
Portfolio Performance Evaluation Part A-2
Performance
Evaluation
Part A
FNCE90056 Investment Management
Semester 1 2020
1
What we are going to look at …
Key Learning Outcomes
• Discuss the importance of performance evaluation
• Identify and discuss the properties of a valid benchmark
• Review the analysis of portfolio returns into components due to the market, to style, and to active
management
• Characterize and distinguish among the components of portfolio evaluation: performance
measurement, performance attribution and performance appraisal
• Distinguish time-weighted and money-weighted rates of return
• Compute, compare, and contrast the following risk-adjusted performance appraisal measures in
their ex-post forms: alpha, Treynor measure, Sharpe ratio, information ratio and M2
• Distinguish between macro and micro performance attribution
• Distinguish between the effect of the interest rate environment and the effect of active
management on fixed-income portfolio returns
• Explore persistence in portfolio performance
2
Portfolio Management
What is fund managers objective?
Returns:
What factors drive returns?
• market performance
• risk factors
• skill of manager.
4
Winners and Losers
Skill
Lucky Lucky
Luck Skilled Unskilled
Unlucky Unlucky
Skilled Unskilled
5
The Use of Past Performance
Survey results
• Most important factor of fund investment is performance (54%); Risk
(only 17%).
• ASIC study found 70% of advertising campaigns use past performance to
lure new clients (of these 65% are based on 1 year of data!).
• Important to specify benchmarks. 6
The Scope of Performance Evaluation
7
Evaluating Fund Performance
Two Approaches:
1. Returns-based analysis
• External
2. Decision-based analysis
• Internal
8
Returns-based Analysis
• Excess returns: calculate the difference between portfolio returns and the returns from a return-
generating model like the CAPM.
• Scaled return methods: adjust the portfolio return for risk so that it can be directly compared to the
benchmark return
9
How do we know if a fund manager has performed
well?
10
Calculating Portfolio Return
Percentage change in market value over a period of time, after accounting for external
cash flows (contributions and withdrawals)
If no external cash flows, return = difference between ending and beginning value,
divided by beginning value
MV1 − ( MV0 + CF )
With cash flow at beginning of measurement period: rt =
MV0 + CF
( MV1 + CF ) − MV0
With cash flow at end of measurement period: rt =
MV0
11
Time Weighted Rate of Return (TWR)
Interim external cash flows result in sub-periods that begin with each cash
flow, and TWR must link the sub-periods together (chain-linking) such that:
For example, during a year there are subsequent sub-periods of 1%, 8% and
-3% returns. The time weighted return for the year is 1.01 X 1.08 X 0.097 –
1 = 0.058 = 5.8%
12
Money-Weighted Rate of Return (MWR)
Measures compound growth rate in the value of all funds invested in the account over the evaluation period
13
Time Weighted versus Money-Weighted Return
MWR represents average growth rate of all money invested, while TWR represents growth of a single unit
invested
Time weighted return is preferable for evaluating a manager who does not have control over the size or
timing of cash flows, and is generally required by GIPS
MWR may be more appropriate in circumstances where manager can influence cash flow size and timing,
such as private equity funds that take down commitments for specific investments
14
Data Quality Issues for Rate of Return Calculations
In some cases, matrix pricing estimates value based on quoted prices for securities (bonds) with
similar attributes
Valuations should be reported on a trade-date, fully accrued basis reflecting unsettled trades and
income owed but not yet paid
15
Components of Portfolio Return
Style – the difference between the benchmark portfolio and the market index
Active return – the difference between the portfolio and its benchmark
16
Callan Table
17
Factors that lead to abnormal performance
19
Types of Benchmarks
Absolute return benchmark
• Can be an objective, but is not investable and therefore does not satisfy benchmark criteria
– For example, CPI + 3%
Style Indexes
• Typically represent portions of an asset category
Returns-based Benchmarks
• Combine style indexes that track managers historical returns
Manager Universes
• Performance of average manager fails all benchmark criteria other than measurability
20
Types of Benchmarks
Style indexes
• Some weight securities or sectors more highly than managers would consider prudent
• Style definition may be ambiguous or inconsistent with the manager’s investment process
21
Types of Benchmarks
Factor model-based
• Single factor model based on market returns would be expected to earn the risk free rate plus the
manager’s beta times the market risk premium
• Can be useful in performance evaluation because they identify systematic sources of return and provide
insight into manager style
22
Types of Benchmarks
Factor model-based
– Ambiguous
23
Types of Benchmarks
Returns based
• constructed using:
• Allocation algorithm solves for combination of style indices that best tracks manager’s returns, which
becomes the benchmark
• Meet most benchmark criteria, and are especially useful when returns are the only information available
24
Types of Benchmarks
Returns based
• May not discern a pattern for managers who rotate among styles
25
Types of Benchmarks
Devise a weighting scheme for the benchmark securities, including a cash position
27
Types of Benchmarks
Manager Universes
Investors want to know how the managers they hired performed relative to the managers they could have hired instead
Ambiguous
28
Tests of Benchmark Quality
Systematic biases – historical beta of account relative to benchmark should be close to 1.0, and correlation between
active and style return should be statistically insignificant
Tracking error – volatility of active returns should be closer to the benchmark than to a market index or alternative
benchmarks
Risk characteristics – exposure to systematic sources of risk should be similar to those of the benchmark over time
Coverage – a high percentage of the securities in the portfolio should be in the benchmark
Turnover – percentage of benchmark’s market value allocated to purchases during a rebalancing has bearing on
whether the benchmark is investable
Positive active positions – too many securities the manager does not want to own indicates a poorly constructed
benchmark
29
Thank you
End of Part A