The Trustee-Manager Relationship continue…

Posted on June 2nd, 2008 in Trust Funds | 6 Comments »

In respect of the investment of the property of the unit trust, regulation 7.02.2 spells out clearly that it is not only a duty but also ‘a right’ of the manager to make decisions. Correspondingly, regulation 7.09 is drafted in negative terms so as to leave no doubt that the trustee’s obligation does not extend to a positive consideration on the merits of particular investments. In other words, the trustee has no ‘right’ to make an investment decision as its counterpart in an ordinary private trust. This is also echoed by regulation 7.03.1 which provides that ‘Nile manager may without the specific authority of the trustee give instructions to agents as to the acquisition or disposal of property of the scheme‘. But at the same time, regulation 7.03 requires the manager to restore the trust portfolio to its status quo if the trustee forms the opinion that the manager exceeds its power in a particular transaction. Read the rest of this entry »

Applying Specific Market Timing and Selection Techniques to Closed-End Funds

Posted on March 13th, 2008 in Bond Funds, Equity Funds | 4 Comments »

The ease of adapting Drach’s methods to closed-end funds is based on the similarity of scanning for relative discounting. The essence of the timing technique is to attempt to expand common stock investment when the overall market is relatively low, confining investment interest to stocks that qualify for the Master List, which appear relatively discounted to the others.

Scanning for the most appropriate closed-end fund based on discounts has the same objective: isolating the cheapest. In Drach’s objectives, he is searching for specific stocks that are overly discounted. In Herzfeld’s closed-end fund analysis, he is searching for the most discounted fund. The focus of both techniques is to isolate excessive discounts relative to historical/statistical norms.

A significant differential between Drach’s concentration on specific stock and Herzfeld’s concentration on specific funds is that the funds, by their structure, involve diversity in the number of different positions. Read the rest of this entry »

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