Investment companies
- Definition of investment co.:
- financial intermediary
- earn fees to pool + invest investors' funds
- giving the investor rights to a proportional share of the pooled fund performance
- Categories:
- Unmanaged co (<=> unit investment trust)
- hold a fixed portfolio of investments for the life of the co.
- ready to redeem the investor's shares at mar. value (similar to open-end fund)
- Managed co:
- Open-end funds operated by investment co. (MUTUAL FUNDs) offer redemption feature
- Close-end funds => close-end investment co. issues shares which are then traded in secondary stock mar.
- Valuing investment co. shares: NAV
- NAV = total assets - liabilities
- Share value:
- of un-managed & open-end investment co.: = NAV ('cos the co. ready to buys back the share at NAV)
- of close-end investment co.: determined in secondary mar => could be at a premium or discount to NAV
- Fund mgnt fee:
- Categories by no. of times charges:
- One-time charges
- Annual charges: operating expense
- mgnt fees => port. mgnt incentive fee
- administrative expenses
- continuing distribution fees: fees paid back to the party hat arranged the initial sale of the shares
- Categories by types of co.
- Unmanaged co: fee for the effort of setting up the fund.
- Managed co.:
- front-end load: sale commission charged at purchase
- back-end load: charge to exit
- Investment strategies: primarily invest in equity, characterized as
- style: focus on the underlying characteristics common to certain investment
- growth strategy may focus on high PE
- value strategy may focus on low PE
- sector: focus on a particular industry
- index: an index fund tracks an index
- global: includes sec. from around the world and might keep port. weights similar to world mar. capitalization weights.
- international fund: does NOT include securities from the home country
- global fund: includes...
- stable value:
- invest in sec. such as
- short-term fixed income instruments
- guaranteed investment contracts which are guaranteed by the issuing insurance co.
- pay principal and a set rate of interest
- ETF (Exchange Trade Funds)
- index-based investment product: allow investors to buy/sell exposure to an index through a single financial instrument
- trade on stock mar like shares of any individual co. but ETF's shares are shares of a portfolio, not of an individual co.
- "in-kind" creation & redemption process used by open-end & UIT (to be continued...)
- Pros & cons of ETFs: in short, ETF is appropriate for specific investors whose strategy is short-term investing, frequent trading, small capital
- Pros
- ETFs dont cover all the market: only some segments (except US: various ETFs cover all the market).
- Cons
- Types of ETFs: ETFs can be grouped by investment category, based on their investment target
- Broad domestic market index: launch on the major local stock index
- Style: value vs growth or large - mid - small cap
- Sector or industry: ETFs track a sector index or invest in baskets of stocks from specific industry sectors.
- Foreign country or region (multiple countries)
- Fixed income
- Commodity
- Actively managed funds
- Risks
- market risk
- asset class/sector risk
- trading risk
- tracking error risk
- derivatives risk
- currency & country risk
- Application
- implementing asset allocation
- diversifying sector/industry exposure
- gaining exposure to international mar
- equitizing cash
- managing CF
- completing overall invest. strategy
- bridging transitions in fund mgnt
- managing port. risk
- applying relative value, long/short strategies
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