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FE 445 - Investment Analysis and Portfolio Management: Fall 2020

This document provides an overview of the FE 445 - Investment Analysis and Portfolio Management course. It introduces the instructor, Farzad Saidi, and covers topics like course structure, grading, textbook information, and an overview of what the course will cover, including the investment process, active vs passive investing, and portfolio theory. The first lecture will focus on investment objectives, constraints, and the initial steps of the investment process, including asset allocation and its impact on risk characteristics.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
99 views21 pages

FE 445 - Investment Analysis and Portfolio Management: Fall 2020

This document provides an overview of the FE 445 - Investment Analysis and Portfolio Management course. It introduces the instructor, Farzad Saidi, and covers topics like course structure, grading, textbook information, and an overview of what the course will cover, including the investment process, active vs passive investing, and portfolio theory. The first lecture will focus on investment objectives, constraints, and the initial steps of the investment process, including asset allocation and its impact on risk characteristics.

Uploaded by

kate ng
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

FE 445 – Investment Analysis and Portfolio

Management
Fall 2020

Farzad Saidi

Boston University | Questrom School of Business


Admin
Instructor

• Farzad Saidi
• E-mail: fsaidi@[Link]
• Office: #522F and ZOOMland

1
The basics

• We will meet Mondays and Wednesdays


• Prerequisites: FE323 (Financial Management)
• THE textbook: Essentials of Investments by Zvi Bodie, Alex Kane,
and Alan J. Marcus
• 11th , 10th , 9th , or 8th edition is fine
• No need to buy the access card
• Some lectures are not modeled after the book:
study materials = slides

2
Grading

• Midterm + final = 35% + 55% = 90%


• Participation = 10%
• LfA means participation is multidimensional ⇒ e.g., use the chat
function to ask questions!

3
What is this course about?

• This course elective provides an introduction to, and elaborates on


some of, the following key topics:
• The investment management process
• Defining investment objectives and constraints
• Modern Portfolio Theory, CAPM, Fama-French factors, APT,
efficient markets, stock and bond valuation models
• Immunizing and managing interest-rate risk
• Active and passive investment strategies, fundamental analysis,
trading practices, and performance evaluation
• The role of futures and options in hedging and speculation
• Understanding the assumptions underlying the different approaches
and their limitations

4
How to do well

• Read the slides and the accompanying textbook chapters (see


syllabus) before coming to class
• Think about the material
• Attend lectures – whatever works!
• Ask questions
• Ask more questions
• Review the material after class

5
Lecture 1: Introduction and
investment process
What would you do? Buying vs. renting

• You just moved to Cupertino, California. You plan to live in this


area for about 5 years, and your family will give you enough money
for a down-payment on a home
• You found a condo with two bedrooms and two bathrooms
• If you rent it, it costs $3,000 per month
• If you buy it, it costs $1 million
• You are able to pay down 20% of the housing price
• Given your credit score, the 30-year fixed mortgage rate is 3%
• Would you rent it or buy it? What else do you need to consider to
make a decision?

6
Investor objectives: individual investors

• Opportunity cost of capital depends on time preferences


• Balance risk and return: test your risk tolerance
• Life cycle is critical in determining risk/return trade-off
• Younger investors: most wealth in human capital ⇒ willing to bear
more risk for higher returns
• Older investors: most wealth in financial capital ⇒ want to plan
retirement: lower risk

7
Investing for retirement

Example:
[Link]

8
Investor constraints

• Liquidity
• Speed and ease of converting asset into cash
• Normally entails sacrifice in return
• Investment horizon
• Planned liquidation date
• Taxes: maximize after-tax returns
• Regulations
• Professional and institutional investors
• Unique needs

9
Investor objectives: professional investors

• Personal trusts
• Mutual funds
• Pension funds: two types
1. Defined contribution pension fund:
• Employee and employer contribute a set amount
• Benefit depends on investment performance
• Risk borne by the individual
• Investment earnings are usually not taxed until the funds are
withdrawn, usually after retirement
2. Defined benefit pension fund:
• Retirement benefit depends on years and salary
• Return assumption important
• Risk borne by the company

10
Investor objectives

• Non-life insurance companies (e.g., property & casualty insurers)


• Invest premiums to cover policyholders’ claims later
• Explains why we need capital regulation for insurance companies ⇒
safeguard solvency
• Hedge against potential claims
• Need liquidity in case of, for instance, natural disaster
• Life insurance companies
• Banks
• Endowment funds (2019)

11
Investor objectives

• Non-life insurance companies (e.g., property & casualty insurers)


• Invest premiums to cover policyholders’ claims later
• Explains why we need capital regulation for insurance companies ⇒
safeguard solvency
• Hedge against potential claims
• Need liquidity in case of, for instance, natural disaster
• Life insurance companies
• Banks
• Endowment funds (2019)

Harvard $39.2bn
Yale $29.4bn
Texas $26.5bn
Stanford $26.5bn
Princeton $25.4bn
MIT $16.4bn
BU $2.19bn

11
Investment process

1. Asset allocation: use portfolio theory


• Money market assets ⇒ liquidity needs
• Fixed-income securities (mostly bonds)
• Stocks: value, size, sector, dividend yield
• Real estate
• Commodities
Main determinant of risk-return profile
2. Security selection:
• What exactly to invest in, e.g., stock-picking

12
U.S. insurance industry holds $3.6 trillion (2015) of fixed-
income assets

13
Investment policy: active vs. passive

• Active
• Try to enhance performance
• Active asset/security allocation
• Must balance with costs
• Trading costs
• Time or paying advisors
• Passive (indexing)
• Trying to get average returns at low cost
• Mix of passive and active

14
Active vs. passive investing

Active Funds Are Losing Capital

Figure. Cumulative Fund Flows1

Source: Investment Company Fact Book


I Large fund flows out of active funds and into passive funds (ETFs)

1 Source: Investment Company Fact Book


1 / 30

15
Active vs. passive investing
Index Funds – New Kings on Wall Street

As of September 2019, for


the first time in history,
I passive funds
manage more capital

• Since September 2019, there is more passive investing than active


16
Summary

This class:

• Asset-allocation decision is the main driver of the risk characteristic

Next class:

• Real vs. financial assets


• Roles of financial markets
• Classes of financial assets and securities
• Money market instruments
• Investment companies, e.g., mutual funds

17

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