Position of the United Trust Trustee part 3

Posted on May 22nd, 2008 in Money Market Funds, Trust Funds, swap | 3 Comments »

  1. The trustee must not follow a direction of the manager if such direction is in breach of the express provisions of the unit trust. This is so irrespective of whether the power in question is beneficial or fiduciary. If it were otherwise, the duty of supervision would be completely hollow.

In respect of every investment proposed by the manager, this means that the trustee has to check each proposal against the letter of the unit trust deed. Read the rest of this entry »

Application of a Swap to Asset/Liability Management continue…

Posted on February 18th, 2008 in Bond Funds, Credit, Sector Funds, Small Cap Funds, Stock Funds, bond, swap | 3 Comments »

The swap terms available to the insurance company are as follows:

  1. Every six months the life insurance company will pay LIBOR.
  2. Every six months the life insurance company will receive 8.40%.

What has this interest-rate contract done for the bank and the life insurance company? Consider first the bank. For every six-month period for the life of the swap agreement, the interest-rate spread will be as follows: Read the rest of this entry »

Total Return Swaps

Posted on February 12th, 2008 in Stock Funds, interest rate, swap | 2 Comments »

A total return swap in the fixed-income market is a swap in which one party makes periodic floating-rate payments to a counterparty in exchange for the total return realized on a reference obligation or a basket of reference obligations. A total return payment includes all cash flows that flow from the reference obligations as well as the capital appreciation or depreciation of those reference obligations. When the reference obligation is a bond market index, the swap is referred to as a total return index swap.

The party that agrees to make the floating payments and receive the total return is referred to as the total return receiver; the party that agrees to receive the floating payments and pay the total return is referred to as the total return payer.

Notice that in a total return swap, the total return receiver is exposed to both credit risk and interest-rate risk. For example, the credit risk spread can decline (resulting in a favorable price movement for the reference obligation), but this gain can be offset by a rise in the level of interest rates. Read the rest of this entry »

Currency Hedging

Posted on February 11th, 2008 in Emerging Markets Funds, Mutual Funds | 2 Comments »

One issue that has elicited different responses is the role of currency risk in overall risk and return. Currency risk has been accounted for in all of the evidence presented. So the existence of currency risk will not reduce the benefits of investing in foreign markets. Rather, the question is whether managing currency risk will improve the gains from international investing.

While the reduction of any kind of risk is good, there are two issues that must be considered with regard to currency risk. First, the correlation between currency risk and stock market risk is close to zero. That means that currency changes and stock returns are independent of one another. Though both currency risk and stock market risk contribute to the total risk of a portfolio of foreign stocks, the contribution of currency risk to the total risk is not very large because of the zero correlation. On average, currency risk contributes less than 20 percent of the total risk. Read the rest of this entry »

Profile of Fund Managers Part 1

Posted on February 1st, 2008 in Bond Funds, Equity Funds, Growth Funds, Money Market Funds, Mutual Funds | 1 Comment »

Despite the huge growth of mutual funds, the marked shift in fund types and the creation of new distribution channels, the concentration of market share within the fund management industry remained remarkably stable during the 1990s. The industry has continued to be led by 10 fund managers with 45% to 55% of all mutual fund assets under management and 25 managers with 70% to 75% of all mutual fund assets under management. But many of the leaders changed places over the decade—some because of strong performances and others due to mergers and acquisitions. At the same time, the number of fund complexes overall has continued to increase as new fund managers have taken advantage of the mutual fund industry’s low barriers to entry.

1. Overall industry concentration and turnover In 1990, there were 464 mutual fund complexes, of which the top 10 managed 56% of total industry assets and the top 25 managed 76% of total assets. By the end of 2000, the mutual fund industry was modestly less concentrated at the top. There were 654 complexes at that date, with the top 10 accounting for 46% of total assets and the top 2, accounting for 71% of total assets.The list of top 25 fund complexes has changed significantly, with some complexes dropping out and others stepping in. Read the rest of this entry »

Best American Funds Management

Posted on February 1st, 2008 in Equity Funds, Growth Funds, Mutual Funds | 1 Comment »

Earlier this year, two mutual fund management companies, American Guardian, Inc. and Best Management, Inc. entered into an agreement under which American Guardian would purchase all of the issued and outstanding stock of Best Management and merge Best Management into American Guardian. Although the companies are now combined, there are still two separate boards of directors for the funds. Each fund complex retained the same independent board members previously elected by the shareholders, but company-appointed directors were reevaluated and will be consistent for both boards. The combined entity, Best American Management, is now in the process of reviewing existing products and services and looking for opportunities to leverage its increased size.

American Guardian was a 30-year old Boston-based mutual fund complex. This fairly staid, conservative company was well known but had not been particularly innovative in fund distribution or shareholder servicing. It had historically chosen to distribute mainly through broker- dealers and outsourced its transfer agent process. The relatively new CEO of American Guardian firmly believed that in today’s highly competitive environment, mutual fund complexes must “grow or die.” He saw an acquisition as a necessary step to ensure that his firm’s products and services would be attractive to investors and their advisers in the future. Read the rest of this entry »

Limited Expenses for Fund Investors Part 2

Posted on February 1st, 2008 in Bond Funds, Equity Funds, Index Funds, Money Market Funds, Mutual Funds, Stock Funds | 4 Comments »

The Class B structure creates challenging financial issues for the fund sponsor This structure carries inherent risk in that the fund’s NAV could decline substantially, decreasing the amount of 126-1 fees and CDSCs received by the sponsor, possibly below the amount it advanced to the broker-dealer. This is especially a risk for an equity fund sponsor, since equity assets are more volatile than other asset types. In recent years, many fund sponsors have sought relief from the risk that the CDSC arrangement entails by taking advantage of new methods of financial engineering developed by banks and investment banks. These methods enable fund sponsors to reduce or eliminate this risk by securitizing and selling the future cash flows from 12b-1 fees and CDSCs. For example, consider a fund sponsor that has just paid a broker a 4% commission for selling Class B shares of a growth find. Rather than wait to recoup this commission via 12b-1 fees and/or CDSCs, the sponsor may sell the rights to these future cash flows to an unrelated party in exchange for a modestly lower payment today. This sale effectively protects the sponsor against the risk associated with a possible downturn in the equities market and consequential decline in cash flows from 12b-1 fees and CDSCs. Read the rest of this entry »

Composition of Mutual Funds Part 1

Posted on January 31st, 2008 in Bond Funds, Equity Funds, Money Market Funds, Mutual Funds | 3 Comments »

1. Asset growth In 1990, the mutual fund industry was a relatively small industry among financial intermediaries, with just over $1 trillion in assets, or 12% of the total sector (see Table 1). By contrast, depository institutions had almost five times the assets, or 56% of the sector (of which commercial banks accounted for $3.3 trillion or 38%, and assets of life insurance companies equaled $1.4 trillion or 16%).

By the end of the 1990s, the mutual fund industry had become a major player among financial intermediaries, with almost $7 trillion in assets and 39% of the overall sector. Although mutual fund assets slightly lagged those of all depository institutions taken as a whole-at $7.6 trillion, Read the rest of this entry »

Valuation, Pricing and Dealing - Dealing in The Shares or Units of The Fund with Investors

Posted on November 14th, 2007 in Mutual Funds, Trust Funds | 3 Comments »

Valuation

The value of a mutual fund depends on the prices or values of the underlying securities and other assets held by the fund. The manager must carry out regular valuations of the fund’s property, so that the prices at Which shares or units may be bought and sold can be calculated. Regulations usually prescribe how often Valuations must be performed. In the UK, for example, the required minimum frequency is twice each month The majority of funds are valued on a daily basis, but some managers prefer a weekly valuation, and some carry out more than one each day. Read the rest of this entry »

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