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Courses 1-2-3 Performance Evaluation and Attribution (CFA LEV 3, Book 6)

2 perspectives

Fund sponsors perspective: Performance evaluation improves the effectiveness of a funds investment policy by acting as a feedback and control mechanism. It: Shows where the policy is effective and where it isnt. Directs management to areas of underperformance. Indicates the results of active management and other policy decisions. Indicates where other, additional strategies can be successfully applied. Provides feedback on the consistent application of the policies set forth in the IPS. Investment managers perspective: As with the fund sponsors perspective, performance evaluation can serve as a feedback and control mechanism. Some investment managers may simply compare their reported investment returns to a designated benchmark. Others will want to investigate the effectiveness of each component of their investment process.

the basic components of portfolio performance evaluation

The three primary concerns to address when assessing the performance of an account are: The return performance of the account over the period. This is addressed through performance measurement, which involves calculating rates of return based on changes in the accounts value over specified time periods. How the manager(s) attained the observed performance. This is addressed by performance attribution. This looks into the sources of the accounts performance (e.g., sector or security selection), and the importance of those sources. Whether the performance was due to investment decisions. This is addressed by performance appraisal. The objective is to draw conclusions regarding whether the performance was affected primarily by investment decisions, by the overall market, or by chance.

Performance measurement: TWR vs MWR


Return without interim cashflows: r = MV1-MV0/MV0 Examples 1-8 (p 126 CFA curriculum Book 6) The time-weighted rate of return (TWR) calculates the compounded rate of growth over a stated evaluation period of one unit of money initially invested in the account. It requires a set of subperiod returns to be calculated covering each period that has an external cash flow. The subperiod results are then compounded together. RP = (1 + Rs1)(1 + Rs2)(1 + Rs3)(1 + Rs4)...(1 + Rsk) 1

The money-weighted rate of return (MWR) is the internal rate of return (IRR) on all funds invested during the evaluation period, including the beginning value of the portfolio.

The MWR, unlike the TWR, is heavily influenced by the size and timing of cash flows. The TWR is the preferred method unless the manager has control over the size and timing of the cash flows. The MWR will be higher (lower) than the TWR if funds are added prior to a period of 4 strong (weak) performance.

Benchmarks. Portfolio Return Components

Benchmark = point of reference 3 components of return for a portfolio: market, style, active management: P= M+S+A
The Pallister account has a total monthly return of 5.04%. During the same period, the portfolio benchmark returned 5.32% and the market index returned 3.92%. Calculate the return due to active management and the return due to the portfolio managers style. Answer: active return = P B = 5.04% 5.32% = 0.28% style return = B M = 5.32% 3.92% = 1.4% where: P = investment managers portfolio return M = market index return B = portfolio benchmark return
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the properties of a valid benchmark


Specified in advance: The benchmark is known to both the investment manager and the fund sponsor. It is specified at the start of an evaluation period. Appropriate: The benchmark is consistent with the managers investment approach and style. Measurable: Its value can be determined on a reasonably frequent basis. Unambiguous: Clearly defined identities and weights of securities constituting the benchmark. Reflective of current investment opinions: The manager has current knowledge and expertise of the securities within the benchmark. Accountable: The manager(s) should accept the applicability of the benchmark and be accountable for deviations in construction due to active management. Investable: It is possible to replicate the benchmark and forgo active management.

alternative types of performance benchmarks


1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6.

7.

There are seven primary types of benchmarks in use: Absolute: An absolute benchmark is a return objective (e.g., aims to exceed a minimum return target). Manager universes: The median manager or fund from a broad universe of managers or funds is used as the benchmark. Broad market indices: There are several well known broad market indices that are used as benchmarks (e.g., the S&P 500 for U.S. common stocks). Style indices: Investment style indices represent specific portions of an asset category. Factor-model-based: Factor models involve relating a specified set of factor exposures to the returns on an account. Returns-based: Returns-based benchmarks are constructed using (1) the managed account returns over specified periods and (2) corresponding returns on several style indices for the same periods. Custom security-based: A custom security-based benchmark reflects the managers investment universe, weighted to reflect a particular approach.
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the steps involved in constructing a custom security-based


The

1.

2.

3.

construction of a custom security-based benchmark entails the following steps: Identify the managers investment process, asset selection (including cash), and weighting. Use the same assets and weighting for the benchmark. Assess and rebalance the benchmark on a predetermined schedule
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the validity of using manager universes as benchmarks

Fund sponsors often use the median account in a particular "universe" of account returns as an appropriate benchmark. However, this form of benchmark has a number of drawbacks:

1. Apart from being measurable, it fails the other properties of a valid benchmark: It is virtually impossible to identify the median manager in advance. Since the median manager is unknown, the measure also fails the unambiguous property. The benchmark is not investable as the median account will differ from one evaluation period to another. It is impossible to verify the benchmarks appropriateness due to the ambiguity of the median manager.

the validity of using manager universes as benchmarks (cont.)


2. Fund sponsors who choose to employ manager universes have to rely on the compilers representations that the accounts within the universe have been appropriately screened, input data validated, and calculation methodology approved.
3. As fund sponsors will terminate underperforming managers, universes will be subject to "survivor bias." As consistently underperforming accounts will not survive, the median will be biased upwards. Without a valid reference point, evaluating manager performance using this benchmark becomes suspect.

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Evaluate benchmark quality by applying tests of quality to a variety of possible benchmarks


Systematic bias: There should be minimal systematic bias in the benchmark relative to the account. To assess the relationship between returns on the benchmark and account, the manager can calculate the historical beta of the account relative to the benchmark. A beta near 1.0 would indicate that the benchmark and portfolio tend to move together (i.e., they are sensitive to the same systematic factors). If the beta differs significantly from 1.0, the benchmark may be responding to a different set of factors.
1.

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tests of quality to possible benchmarks (cont.)


2. Tracking error: Tracking error is defined as the volatility of the excess return earned due to active management. If the appropriate benchmark has been selected, the standard deviation of the difference between the returns on the portfolio and the benchmark (the tracking error) will be smaller than that of the difference between the portfolio and a market index. This would indicate that the benchmark is capturing important elements of the managers investment style.
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tests of quality to possible benchmarks (cont.)


3. Risk characteristics: An accounts exposure to systematic sources of risk should be similar to those of the benchmark over time. That is, the systematic risk may be higher or lower during different periods but should average that of the benchmark. If the account tends to consistently exhibit more or less risk than the benchmark, this would indicate a systematic bias.
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tests of quality to possible benchmarks (cont.)


4. Coverage: Benchmark coverage is defined as the proportion of a portfolios market value that is made up of securities that are also in the benchmark. The coverage ratio is the market value of the securities that are in both the portfolio and the benchmark as a percentage of the total market value of the portfolio. The higher the coverage ratio, the more closely the manager is replicating the benchmark.
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tests of quality to possible benchmarks (cont.)


5. Turnover: Benchmark turnover is the proportion of the benchmarks total market value that is bought or sold (i.e., turned over) during periodic rebalancing. Passively managed portfolios should utilize benchmarks with low turnover.

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tests of quality to possible benchmarks (cont.)


6. Positive active positions: An active position is the difference between the weight of a security or sector in the managed portfolio versus the benchmark. For example, if the account has 5% in Vodafone and the benchmark has 3%, the active position is 5% 3% = 2%.
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issues in assigning benchmarks to hedge funds


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2.

3.

The diversity of hedge funds has led to problems when designating a suitable benchmark. In most cases, hedge funds hold short investment positions as well as long. This leads to performance measurement issues as well as administrative and compliance issues. Given the above complications, other performance methods may be more appropriate for hedge funds: Value-added return: One approach is to evaluate in terms of performance impact. A return can be calculated by summing up the performance impacts of the individual security positions, both long and short where the weights sum to zero. Separate long/short benchmarks: It may be possible to use either a returns-based or security-based benchmark approach to construct separate long and short benchmarks. The benchmarks could then be combined in their relevant proportions to create an appropriate overall benchmark. The Sharpe ratio: The confusion over exactly what constitutes a hedge fund as well as the myriad different strategies employed by hedge fund managers has led to the popular use of the Sharpe ratio, which compares portfolio returns to a risk-free return rather than a benchmark. 17

macro and micro performance attribution

The basic concept of performance attribution is to identify and quantify the sources of returns that are different from the designated benchmark. There are two basic forms of performance attribution: Macro performance attribution is done at the fund sponsor level. The approach can be carried out in percentage terms (a rate-of-return metric) and/or in monetary terms (a value metric). Micro performance attribution is done at the investment manager level. Note the distinction does not relate to who is carrying out the performance attribution, but rather to the variables being used.
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three main inputs into the macro attribution approach


1.

2.

3.

Policy allocations: It is up to the sponsor to determine asset categories and weights as well as allocate the total fund among asset managers. As in any IPS development, allocations will be determined by the sponsors risk tolerance, long-term expectations, and the liabilities (spending needs) the fund must meet. Benchmark portfolio returns: A fund sponsor may use broad market indexes as the benchmarks for asset categories and use narrowly focused indexes for managers investment styles. Fund returns, valuations and external cash flows: When using percentage terms, returns will need to be calculated at the individual manager level. This enables the fund sponsor to make decisions regarding manager selection. If also using monetary values, account valuation and external cash flow data are needed to compute the value impacts of the fund sponsors investment policy decision making.
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Macro Attribution Analysis


There are six levels of investment policy decision making, by which the funds performance can be analyzed: 1. Net contributions how much of the change in value was due to additions and withdrawals from the portfolio 2. Risk-free asset the return that would be generated if the fund and all contributions were invested at the risk free rate 3. Asset categories the return that would be earned on passive investments at the policy weight for each asset class 4. Benchmarks the difference between the sum of the weighted returns of manager benchmarks and the asset category return (misfit return or style return) 5. Investment managers the difference between the weighted average sum of manager returns and that of their benchmarks 6. Allocation effects this category reconciles the difference between the funds actual return and the separate analyses conducted above, in order to account for any differences resulting from deviation from policy weights The levels represent investment strategies management can utilize to add value to 20 the fund, and they increase in risk, expected return, and tracking error as you progress down the list.

micro performance attribution

Micro performance attribution concerns itself with analyzing individual portfolios relative to designated benchmarks. The value-added return (portfolio return minus benchmark return) can be broken into three components: (1) pure sector allocation, (2) allocationselection interaction, and (3) within sector selection.

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micro performance attribution


Example

12,13,14,15 pp.160

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fundamental factor models in micro performance attribution


1. 2.

3.

4.

It should be possible to construct multifactor models to conduct micro attribution. Constructing a suitable factor model would involve the following: Identify the fundamental factors that will generate systematic returns. Determine the exposures of the portfolio and the benchmark to the fundamental factors at the start of the evaluation period. The benchmark could be the risk exposures of a style or custom index or a set of normal factor exposures that are typical of the managers portfolio. Determine the managers active exposure to each factor. The managers active exposures are the difference between his "normal" exposures as demonstrated in the benchmark and his actual exposures. Determine the "active impact." This is the added return due to the managers active exposures. The results of the fundamental factor micro attribution will indicate the source of portfolio returns, based upon actual factor exposures versus the managers normal factor exposures.
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Performance Appraisal: Calculate, interpret, and contrast alternative risk-adjusted performance measures

The final stage of the performance evaluation process, performance appraisal, measures compare returns on a risk-adjusted basis. We will look at five methods of performance appraisal in their ex post (historical) forms: Ex post alpha (Jensens alpha): Alpha is the difference between the account return and the return required to compensate for systematic risk. Alpha uses the ex post SML as a benchmark to appraise performance. Information ratio: Excess return is measured against variability: IR= (RP RB) / (P B) The Treynor measure: The Treynor measure calculates the accounts excess return above the risk-free rate, relative to the accounts beta (i.e., systematic risk). T= (RP RF) / P The Sharpe ratio: Unlike the previous two methods, the Sharpe ratio calculates excess returns above the risk-free rate, relative to total risk measured by standard deviation. Sharpe ratio = (RP RF) / P M2: Using the CML, M2 compares the accounts return to the market return. 24

Compare and contrast the information ratio, Treynor measure, and Sharpe ratio

The information ratio, Treynor measure, and Sharpe ratio all measure excess return per unit of risk, using variability of returns to measured risk. Sharpe and Treynor measure excess return relative to a risk-free asset, while the information ratio measures excess return relative to a benchmark. Thus, all three measure excess return as the asset return minus some benchmark return. One primary difference among the three lies in the variability measure used, even though all utilize a type of standard deviation. The Sharpe ratio uses the total standard deviation of returns (i.e., variability in the assets returns that can be attributed to both systematic and unsystematic factors). The Treynor measure, on the other hand, uses beta which captures only a portion of the variability in the assets returns (i.e., the variability that is attributable to systematic factors).

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Compare and contrast the information ratio, Treynor measure, and Sharpe ratio (cont.)

Even though Sharpe uses the total standard deviation, while Treynor uses only a portion of the total standard deviation, they both utilize a standard deviation measure that captures the variability of total returns relative to the average total return over the period (i.e., the traditional method for calculating standard deviation). Unlike Sharpe and Treynor, the information ratio uses a standard deviation measure that captures only the variability of excess returns, not the variability of total returns. Thus, the numerator of the information ratio is an excess return, just like with Sharpe and Treynor, but the denominator is the standard deviation of the numerator (i.e., excess return) rather than standard deviation of the total return.

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Performance quality control charts in performance appraisal


Quality control charts plot managers performance relative to a benchmark, with a statistical confidence interval. The managers value-added return is plotted on the vertical axis and time is plotted on the horizontal axis. The center of the vertical axis is where the portfolio and benchmark returns are equal, so the value-added return is zero. The solid, horizontal line originating at zero can be thought of as the benchmark return, and any portfolio returns plotting off the horizontal line would represent those occasions when the portfolio and benchmark returns are not equal.

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Criteria for Manager Selection


Criteria Physical Organizational structure, size, experience, other resources People Investment professionals, compensation Process Investment philosophy, style, decision making Procedures Benchmarks, trading, quality control Performance Results relative to an appropriate benchmark Price Investment management fees Importance (%) 5

25

30

15

20

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manager continuation policy


The

costs of hiring and firing investment managers can be considerable because the fired managers portfolios will have to be moved to the new manager(s). This can be quite expensive, both in time and money: A proportion of the existing managers portfolio may have to be liquidated if the new managers style is significantly different. Replacing managers involves a significant amount of time and effort for the fund sponsor.
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manager continuation policy

As a result, some fund sponsors have a formalized, written manager continuation policy (MCP) which will include the goals and guidelines associated with the management review process: First, replace managers only when justified (i.e., minimize unnecessary manager turnover).
Short periods of underperformance should not necessarily mean automatic replacement.

Develop formal policies and apply them consistently to all managers. Use portfolio performance and other information in evaluating managers:
Appropriate and consistent investment strategies (i.e., the manager doesnt continually change strategies based upon near term performance). Relevant benchmark (style) selections. Personnel turnover. Growth of the account.
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manager continuation policy


1. 2.

Implementing the MCP process usually involves: Continual manager monitoring. Regular, periodic manager review.

The manager review should be handled much as the original hiring interview, which should have included the managers key personnel. Then, before replacing a manager, management must determine that the move will generate value for the firm (like a positive NPV project). That is, the value gained from hiring a new manager will outweigh the costs associated with the process.
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Type I and Type II errors in manager continuation decisions

Type I and Type II errors refer to incorrectly rejecting or failing to reject the null hypothesis, respectively. Stating the null hypothesis as the manager generates no valueadded and the alternative hypothesis as the manager adds value, there are two potential statistical errors: H0: The manager adds no value. HA: The manager adds positive value. Type I error Rejecting the null hypothesis when it is true. That is, keeping managers who are returning no value-added. Type II error Failing to reject the null when it is false. That is, firing good managers who are adding value.
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Jack Jensen is the president of Jensen Management. Jensen prides himself on the care of his employees. He states that in 30 years of portfolio management, he has only had to fire two employees. Tom Mercer is president of Analytical Investors. His policy has been to replace poorly performing managers, where poor performance equals underperforming their benchmark for two successive quarters. Which of the following best describes these managers continuation decisions? A) Jensen is likely committing Type II error and Mercer is likely committing Type I error.
B) Jensen is not likely to be committing any error and Mercer is likely committing Type II error. C) Jensen is likely committing Type I error and Mercer is likely committing Type II error.

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Quiz
Your
Type

answer: C was correct!

I error is retaining (or hiring) a poorly performing manager. Jensen is likely committing Type I error because he rarely fires anyone. Type II error is firing (or not hiring) a superior manager. Jensen is likely committing Type II error because he fires managers after only two quarters of underperformance. Two quarters is not enough time to properly evaluate a manager.
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Robert Brown is in the process of decomposing the various sources of return to his bond portfolio that yielded a return of 10%. The actual treasury yield was 8%, which is 0.5% better than the expected yield of 7.5%. In addition, Brown has ascertained that his portfolio benefited by 0.50% due to sector allocation and 0.25% from allocation/selection interaction. Based on this information, how much of the portfolio's overall return is attributable to within-sector selection? A)1.25%.B)1.00%.C)1.75%.

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Expected

treasury yield = 7.50% Unexpected treasury yield = 0.50% Return from sector allocation = 0.50% Return from allocation/selection interaction = 0.25% Return attributable to within-sector selection = 1.25% (can be backed out given the other information) Total return = 10.0%
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In using micro attribution analysis to break down the performance of the manager of a fund, the analyst finds the following for a particular asset class: Portfolio Weight 9% Sector Benchmark Weight 7% Sector Portfolio Return 4% Sector Benchmark Return 3% Benchmark Return 0.2% Based upon these numbers, the within sector selection return would be:

A) 0.070%. B) 0.020%. C) 0.056%.

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A was correct!

The micro attribution breakdown is below: Pure sector allocation return: = [0.09 0.07] [.03 0.002] = 0.056% Within sector selection return: = 0.07 [.04 .03] = 0.07% Allocation/selection interaction return: = [0.09 0.07] [.04 .03] = 0.02% 38

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