B P P C: Asics OF Ortfolio Lanning AND Onstruction
B P P C: Asics OF Ortfolio Lanning AND Onstruction
B P P C: Asics OF Ortfolio Lanning AND Onstruction
EXAM FOCUS
There is nothing difficult here, but the material is important because it is the foundation for the
portfolio construction material at Level II and especially Level III. You should be ready to explain why
investment policy statements are created and what their major components are. You should be
familiar with the objectives (risk and return) and the constraints: liquidity, legal, time horizon, tax
treatment, and unique circumstances. Know the difference between ability and willingness to take
risk, the factors that define an asset class, and how asset allocation is used in constructing portfolios.
LOS 44.a: Describe the reasons for a written investment policy statement (IPS).
An investment manager is very unlikely to produce a good result for a client without understanding
that client’s needs, circumstances, and constraints.
A written investment policy statement will typically begin with the investor’s goals in terms of risk
and return. These should be determined jointly, as the goals of high returns and low risk (while quite
popular) are likely to be mutually exclusive in practice. Investor expectations in terms of returns
must be compatible with investor’s tolerance for risk (uncertainty about portfolio performance).
In any case, the IPS will, at a minimum, contain a clear statement of client circumstances and
constraints, an investment strategy based on these, and some benchmark against which to evaluate
the account performance.
LOS 44.c: Describe risk and return objectives and how they may be developed for a client.
The risk objectives in an IPS may take several forms. An absolute risk objective might be to “have
no decrease in portfolio value during any 12-month period” or to “not decrease in value by more
than 2% at any point over any 12-month period.” Low absolute percentage risk objectives such as
these may result in portfolios made up of securities that offer guaranteed returns (e.g., U.S. Treasury
bills).
Absolute risk objectives can also be stated in terms of the probability of specific portfolio results,
either percentage losses or dollar losses, rather than strict limits on portfolio results. Examples are
as follows:
“No greater than a 5% probability of returns below –5% in any 12-month period.”
“No greater than a 4% probability of a loss of more than $20,000 over any 12-month
period.”
An absolute return objective may be stated in nominal terms, such as “an overall return of at least
6% per annum,” or in real returns, such as “a return of 3% more than the annual inflation rate each
year.”
Relative risk objectives relate to a specific benchmark and can also be strict, such as, “Returns will
not be less than 12-month euro LIBOR over any 12-month period,” or stated in terms of probability,
such as, “No greater than a 5% probability of returns more than 4% below the return on the MSCI
World Index over any 12-month period.”
Return objectives can be relative to a benchmark portfolio return, such as, “Exceed the return on the
S&P 500 Index by 2% per annum.” For a bank, the return objective may be relative to the bank’s cost
of funds (deposit rate). While it is possible for an institution to use returns on peer portfolios, such as
an endowment with a stated objective to be in the top quartile of endowment fund returns, peer
performance benchmarks suffer from not being investable portfolios. There is no way to match this
investment return by portfolio construction before the fact.
In any event, the account manager must make sure that the stated risk and return objectives are
compatible, given the reality of expected investment results and uncertainty over time.
LOS 44.d: Distinguish between the willingness and the ability (capacity) to take risk in analyzing
an investor’s financial risk tolerance.
An investor’s ability to bear risk depends on financial circumstances. Longer investment horizons (20
years rather than 2 years), greater assets versus liabilities (more wealth), more insurance against
unexpected occurrences, and a secure job all suggest a greater ability to bear investment risk in
terms of uncertainty about periodic investment performance.
An investor’s willingness to bear risk is based primarily on the investor’s attitudes and beliefs about
investments (various asset types). The assessment of an investor’s attitude about risk is quite
subjective and is sometimes done with a short questionnaire that attempts to categorize the
investor’s risk aversion or risk tolerance.
When the adviser’s assessments of an investor’s ability and willingness to take investment risk are
compatible, there is no real problem selecting an appropriate level of investment risk. If the
investor’s willingness to take on investment risk is high but the investor’s ability to take on risk is low,
the low ability to take on investment risk will prevail in the adviser’s assessment.
In situations where ability is high but willingness is low, the adviser may attempt to educate the
investor about investment risk and correct any misconceptions that may be contributing to the
investor’s low stated willingness to take on investment risk. However, the adviser’s job is not to
change the investor’s personality characteristics that contribute to a low willingness to take on
investment risk. The approach will most likely be to conform to the lower of the investor’s ability or
willingness to bear risk, as constructing a portfolio with a level of risk that the client is clearly
uncomfortable with will not likely lead to a good outcome in the investor’s view.
LOS 44.e: Describe the investment constraints of liquidity, time horizon, tax concerns, legal and
regulatory factors, and unique circumstances and their implications for the choice of portfolio
assets.
Professor’s Note: When I was studying for the CFA exams over 20 years ago, we memorized R-R-T-T-L-L-U as a
checklist for addressing the important points of portfolio construction, and it still works today. Then, as now,
the important points to cover in an IPS were Risk, Return, Time horizon, Tax situation, Liquidity, Legal
restrictions, and the Unique constraints of a specific investor.
Investment constraints include the investor’s liquidity needs, time horizon, tax considerations, legal
and regulatory constraints, and unique needs and preferences.
Liquidity: Liquidity refers to the ability to turn investment assets into spendable cash in a short
period of time without having to make significant price concessions to do so. Investor needs for
money to pay tuition, to pay for a parent’s assisted living expenses, or to fund other possible spending
needs may all require that some liquid assets be held. As we noted in an earlier topic review
discussing property and casualty insurance companies, claims arrive unpredictably to some extent
and therefore their portfolios must hold a significant proportion of liquid (or maturing) securities in
order to be prepared to honor these claims. Illiquid investments in hedge funds and private equity
funds, which typically are not traded and have restrictions on redemptions, are not suitable for an
investor who may unexpectedly need access to the funds.
Time horizon: In general, the longer an investor’s time horizon, the more risk and less liquidity the
investor can accept in the portfolio. While the expected returns on a broad equities portfolio may not
be too risky for an investor with a 20-year investment horizon, they likely are too risky for an investor
who must fund a large purchase at the end of this year. For such an investor, government securities
or a bank certificate of deposit may be the most appropriate investments because of their low risk
and high liquidity at the time when the funds will be needed.
Tax situation: Besides an individual’s overall tax rate, the tax treatment of various types of
investment accounts is also a consideration in portfolio construction. For a fully taxable account,
investors subject to higher tax rates may prefer tax-free bonds (U.S.) to taxable bonds or prefer
equities that are expected to produce capital gains, which are often taxed at a lower rate than other
types of income. A focus on expected after-tax returns over time in relation to risk should correctly
account for differences in tax treatments as well as investors’ overall tax rates.
Some types of investment accounts, such as retirement accounts, may be tax exempt or tax deferred.
Investors with such accounts may choose to put securities that generate fully taxed income, such as
corporate bond interest, in accounts that are tax deferred, while seeking long-term capital gains, tax-
exempt interest income, and dividend income (in jurisdictions where dividends receive preferential
tax treatment) in their personal accounts, which have no tax deferral benefit.
Legal and regulatory: In addition to financial market regulations that apply to all investors, more
specific legal and regulatory constraints may apply to particular investors. Trust, corporate, and
qualified investment accounts may all be restricted by law from investing in particular types of
securities and assets. There may also be restrictions on percentage allocations to specific types of
investments in such accounts. Corporate officers and directors face legal restrictions on trading in
the securities of their firms that the account manager should be aware of.
Unique circumstances: Each investor, whether individual or institutional, may have specific
preferences or restrictions on which securities and assets may be purchased for the account. Ethical
preferences, such as prohibiting investment in securities issued by tobacco or firearms producers,
are not uncommon. Restrictions on investments in companies or countries where human rights
abuses are suspected or documented would also fall into this category. Religious preferences may
preclude investment in securities that make explicit interest payments. Unique investor preferences
may also be based on diversification needs when the investor’s income depends heavily on the
prospects for one company or industry. An investor who has founded or runs a company may not
want any investment in securities issued by a competitor to that company.
LOS 44.f: Explain the specification of asset classes in relation to asset allocation.
After having determined the investor objectives and constraints through the exercise of creating an
IPS, a strategic asset allocation is developed which specifies the percentage allocations to the
included asset classes. In choosing which asset classes to consider when developing the strategic
asset allocation for the account, the correlations of returns within an asset class should be relatively
high, indicating that the assets within the class are similar in their investment performance. On the
other hand, it is low correlations of returns between asset classes that leads to risk reduction through
portfolio diversification.
Historically, only the broad categories of equities, bonds, cash, and real estate were considered.
More recently, a group of several investable asset classes, referred to collectively as alternative
investments, has gained more prominence. Alternative investment asset classes include hedge funds
of various types, private equity funds, managed or passively constructed commodity funds, artwork,
and intellectual property rights.
We can further divide equities by whether the issuing companies are domestic or foreign, large or
small, or whether they are traded in emerging or developed markets. An example of specifying asset
classes is world equities. A U.S. investor may want to divide world equities into different regions.
Figure 1 shows the correlation matrix, annualized returns, and volatilities among four different
regions and the United States.
Source: www.msci.com/products/indices/
With bonds, we can divide the overall universe of bonds into asset classes based on maturities or on
criteria such as whether they are foreign or domestic, government or corporate, or investment grade
or speculative (high yield). Overall, the asset classes considered should approximate the universe of
permissible investments specified in the IPS.
Once the universe of asset classes has been specified, the investment manager will collect data on
the returns, standard deviation of returns, and correlations of returns with those of other asset
classes for each asset class.
Figure 2 illustrates the strategic asset allocation for a pension fund.
Cash 0.0%
Commodities 2.0%
100%
Source: State of Vermont, Office of the State Treasurer. Target allocation as of March 31, 2012.
www.vermonttreasurer.gov/pension-funds.
LOS 44.g: Describe the principles of portfolio construction and the role of asset allocation in
relation to the IPS.
Once the portfolio manager has identified the investable asset classes for the portfolio and the risk,
return, and correlation characteristics of each asset class, an efficient frontier, analogous to one
constructed from individual securities, can be constructed using a computer program. By combining
the return and risk objectives from the IPS with the actual risk and return properties of the many
portfolios along the efficient frontier, the manager can identify that portfolio which best meets the
risk and return requirements of the investor. The asset allocation for the efficient portfolio selected
is then the strategic asset allocation for the portfolio.
So far, we have not concerned ourselves with deviations from strategic asset allocations or with
selection of individual securities within individual asset classes. These activities are referred to as
active (versus passive) portfolio management strategies. A manager who varies from strategic asset
allocation weights in order to take advantage of perceived short-term opportunities is adding tactical
asset allocation to the portfolio strategy. Security selection refers to deviations from index weights
on individual securities within an asset class. For example, a portfolio manager might overweight
energy stocks and underweight financial stocks, relative to the index weights for U.S. large-cap
equities as an asset class. For some asset classes, such as hedge funds, individual real estate
properties, and artwork, investable indexes are not available. For these asset classes, selection of
individual assets is required by the nature of the asset class.
While each of these active strategies may produce higher returns, they each also increase the risk of
the portfolio compared to a passive portfolio of asset class indexes. A practice known as risk
budgeting sets an overall risk limit for the portfolio and budgets (allocates) a portion of the
permitted risk to the systematic risk of the strategic asset allocation, the risk from tactical asset
allocation, and the risk from security selection.
Active portfolio management has two specific issues to consider.
1. An investor may have multiple managers actively managing to the same benchmark for the
same asset class (or may have significant benchmark overlap). In this case, one manager
may overweight an index stock while another may underweight the same stock. Taken
together, there is no net active management risk, although each manager has reported
active management risk. Overall, the risk budget is underutilized as there is less net active
management than gross active management.
2. When all managers are actively managing portfolios relative to an index, trading may be
excessive overall. This extra trading could have negative tax consequences, specifically
potentially higher capital gains taxes, compared to an overall efficient tax strategy.
One way to address these issues is to use a core-satellite approach. The core-satellite approach
invests the majority, or core, portion of the portfolio in passively managed indexes and invests a
smaller, or satellite, portion in active strategies. This approach reduces the likelihood of excessive
trading and offsetting active positions.
Clearly, the success of security selection will depend on the manager’s skill and the opportunities
(mispricings or inefficiencies) within a particular asset class. Similarly, the success of tactical asset
allocation will depend both on the existence of short-term opportunities in specific asset classes and
on the manager’s ability to identify them.