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SCHWESERNOTES™ FOR THE FRM EXAM FRM 2013 Book Part II r>> M £ 201 Kaplan, foe., d.b.a Kaplan Schweser All rights reserved Printed in the Uni Led States of America ISBN: 97ft-1-4277ÿ474-6 l M277-4474-2 PPN: 3200-3242 Required Disclaimer: GAftP11 dues not diduite, promote, review, nr furnt die icoinry uf (lie pfiiJiicLÿ or services ulleredby Kaplan Sdiweret ofFRM® related i dermal ion, nor doe* it endorse any pass rates claimed by Lite provider Further, GARP® is not responsible ibr any Tees or costs jiaid by die user LO Kaplan Sdiweser, nor is GARP® responsible for any fees or costs of any jrerson or entity providing any setvioes Lo Kaplan Schweset, FRM®, GARP®, and Global Association of Ri sit Professionals™ are trademarks owned by die Global Association ofRisli Professionals Inc GARP FRM Practice Ream Questions are reprinted with permission, Copyright 2012, Global Association of Risk Professionals All rights reserved, These materials may HOL be copied w id torn written permission from die audio r The unauthorised duplication of diese notes is a violation of global copyright laws Your assistance in pursuing potential violators of this law is greatly appreciated Disclainier:Tbe SchweserNotes should lie used in conjunction with die original readings as set forth by GARP® The information am tail ted in these books is based on the original readings and is believed to be accurate However, dieir accuracy cannot be guaranteed nor is aov warranty conveyed as to your ultimate exam success Page Kaplan., Inc READING ASSIGNMENTS AND AIM STATEMENTS Thefollowing material is a review of the Risk Management and Investment Management, and Current Issues in Financial Markets principles designed to address the AIM statements setforth by the Global Association of Risk Professionals READING ASSIGNMENTS Risk Management and Investment Management Richard Grinold and Ronald Kahn, Active Forfolio Management: A Quantitative Approachfor Producing Superior Returns and Controlling Risk, 2nd Edition (New York: McGraw-Hill, 2000) 53 “Portfolio Construction,” Chapter 14 (page 12) Philippe Jorion, Value-at-Risk: The New Benchmark for Managing Financial Risk, 3rd Edition (New York: McGraw Hill, 2007) 54 “Portfolio Risk: Analytical Methods,” Chapter (page 24) 55 “VaR and Risk Budgeting in Investment Management,” Chapter 17 (page 41) RoherL Litterman and the Quandcative Resources Group, Modem Investment Management: An Equilibrium Approach (Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons, 2003) 56 “Risk Monitoring and Performance Measurement,” Chapter 17 (page 57) Zvi Bodie, Alex Kane, and Alan J Marcus, Investments, 9th Edition (New York McGraw- Hill, 2010) 57 “Empirical Evidence on Security Returns,” Chapter 13 (page 68) 58 “Portfolio Performance Evaluation,” Chapter 24 (page 81) David P Stowed, An Introduction to Investment Banks, Hedge Funds, and Private Equity (Academic Press, 2010) 59 “Overview ofHedge Funds,” Chapter 11 (page 103) 60 “Hedge Fund Investment Strategies,” Chapter 12 (page 112) ©2013 Kaplan, Inc Page Book A Reading Assignments and ATM Statements 61 ""Overview ofPriva.ce Equity/ Chapter 16 (page 125) G Constantinides, M Harris and R Stulz Ed., Handbook of the Economics of Finance, Volume 2B (Oxford: Elsevier, 2013) 62 “Hedge Funds/ Chapter 17 (page 135) 63 Andrew W Lo, "Risk Management for Hedge Funds: Introduction and Overview/ Financial AnalystsJournal, Vol 57, No (Nov to Dec, 2001), pp 16-33 (page 146) 64 Stephen Brown, William Goetzmann, Bing Liang, Christopher Schwarz, “Trust and Delegation/ May 28, 2010 (page 161) 65 Greg N Gregoriou and Franÿois-Serge Lhabitant, December, 2008 A Riot of Red Flags/ (pag£ 169) Current Issues in Financial Markets 66 Jaime Caruana and Stefan Avdjiev, ''Sovereign Creditworthiness and Financial Stability: An International Perspective.11 Banque de France Financial Stability Review, No 16 (April 2012), pp 71-85 {page 17ft) 67 Li Lian Ong and Martin Cihdk, “Of Runes and Sagas: Perspectives on Liquidity Stress Testing Using an Iceland Example/ IMF Working Paper WP/10/ 156, July 20 10 (page 189) 68 Andrew G Haldane and Benjamin Nelson, “Tails of the Unexpected.” Speech from “The Credit Crisis Five Years On: Unpacking the Crisis1’ Conference at the University of Edinburgh (Bank of England, June 2012) (page 203) 69 Andrew G Haldane and Vasileios Madouros, “The Dog and the Frisbee/ Speech from the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City's 36th Economic Policy Symposium (Bank of England, August 31 2012) (page 215) Gerald Rosenlield, Jay Lorsch, Rakesh Khurana (eds.), Challenges to Business in the Twenty-First Century, (Cambridge: American Academy of Arts & Sciences, 2011) 70 “Challenges of Financial Innovation/ Chapter (page 228) 71 Ananth Madliavan, “Exchange-Traded Funds, Market Structure and die Flash Crash/ October 2011 (page 235) Page ©2013 Kaplan, Tnc Book Reading Assignments and AIM Statements AIM STATEMENTS 53 Portfolio Construction Candidates, after completing this reading, should be able to: Identify the inputs to the portfolio construction process, {page 12) Describe the motivation and methods for refining alphas in die implementation process, {page 12) Describe neutralization and methods for refining alphas to be neutral, (page 13) Describe the implications of transaction costs on portfolio construction, (page 14) Explain practical issues in portfolio construction such as determination of risk aversion, incorporation of specific risk aversion, and proper alpha coverage {page 14) Describe portfolio revisions and rebalancing and the tradeoffs between alpha, risk, transaction costs anti time horizon, (page 16) Describe the optimal no-trade region for rebalancing with transaction costs {page 16) Describe the following portfolio construction techniques, including strengths and weaknesses: Screens * Stratification Linear programming • Quadratic programming {page 17) Describe dispersion, explain its causes and describe methods for controlling forms of dispersion, (page 18) * * 54 Portfolio Risk: Analytical Methods Candidates, after completing this reading, should be able to: Define and distinguish between individual VaR, incremental VaR and diversified portfolio VaR (page 24) Explain the role correlation has on portfolio risk, (page 25) Compute diversified VaR, individual VaR, and undiversified VaR of a portfolio {page 24) Define, compute, and explain the uses of marginal VaR, incremental VaR, and component VaR (page 28) Describe the challenges associated with VaR measurement as portfolio size increases (page 29) Demonstrate how one can use marginal VaR to guide decisions about portfolio VaR (page 33) Explain the difference between risk management and portfolio management, and demonstrate how to use marginal VaR in portfolio management, (page 34) 55 VaR and Risk Budgeting in Investment Management Candidates, after completing this reading, should be able to: Define risk budgeting, (page 1) Describe the impact of horizon, turnover and leverage on the risk management process in the investment management industry (page4l) Describe the investment process of large investors such as pension funds, (page 42) Describe the risk management challenges with hedgie funds, {page 43) ©2613 Kaplan, Inc Page Boole Reeling Assignments and AIM Statements Define and describe die following types of risk: absolute risk, relative risk, policymis risk, active management risk, funding risk and sponsor risk, (page 43) Describe how VaR can be used to check compliance, monitor risk budgets and reverse engineer sources of risk, (page 46) Explain how VaR can be used in die investment process and development of guidelines, (page 48) Describe the risk budgeting process across asset classes and active managers investment (page 49) 56 Risk Monitoring and Performance Measurement Candidates, after completing this reading, should be able to: Define, compare and contrast VaR and tracking error as risk measures, (page 57} Describe risk planning including objectives and participants in its development (page 58) Describe risk budgeting and the role of quantitative methods, (page 59) Describe risk monitoring and its role in an internal control environment, (page 59) Identify sources of risk consciousness within an organization, (page 59) Describe die objectives of a risk management unit in an investment management firm, (page 60) Describe how risk monitoring confirms that investment activities are consistent with expectations, (page 61) Explain die importance of liquidity considerations for a portfolio, (page 61) Describe die objectives of performance measurement, (page 62) 10 Describe common features of a performance measurement framework, (page 62) 57 Empirical Evidence on Security Returns Candidates, after completing this reading, should be able to: Interpret die expected return-beta relationship implied in the CAPM, 34 Page and describe the methodologies for estimating the security characteristic line and the security market line from a proper dataset, (page 68) Describe the two-stage procedure employed in early tests of die CAPM and explain the concerns related to these early test results, (page 69) Describe and interpret Rolls critique to the CAPM, as well as expansions of Rolfs critique, (page 69) Describe the methodologies for correcting measurement error in beta, and explain historical test results of these methodologies, (page 70} Explain the test of the single-index models that accounts for human capital, cyclical variations and non traded business, (page 71) Summarize the tests of multifactor CAPM and APT (page 72) Describe and interpret the Fama-French three-factor model, and explain historical test results related to this model, (page 73) Summarize different models used to measure the impact of liquidity1' on asset pricing and asset returns, (page 74) Explain die "equity premium puzzle" and describe the different explanations to diis observation, (page 75) ©201 KapLan, Inc Bonk Reading Alignments and AIM Statements 53 Portfolio Performance Evaluation Candidates, after completing this reading, should he able to: Differentiate between the time-weighted and doliar-weighted returns of a portfolio and their appropriate uses, {page Si) Describe the different risk-adjusted performance measures, such as Sharpe’s measure, Treynor’s measure, Jensen's measure (Jensen’s alpha), and information ratio, (page 84) Descrihe the uses for the Modigliani-squared and Treynor’s measure in comparing two portfolios, and the graphical representation of these measures, (page 84) Descrihe the statistical significance of a performance measure using standard error and the t-statisric (page 91) Explain the difficulties in measuring the performances of hedge funds, (page 92) Explain how portfolios with dynamic risk levels can affect the use of the Sharpe ratio to measure performance, (page 92} Descrihe techniques to measure the market timing ability of fund managers with a regression and with a call option model, (page 93) Descrihe style analysis, (page 94) Descrihe the asset allocation decision, (page 94) 59 Overview of Hedge Funds Candidates, after completing this reading, should be able to: Descrihe the common characteristics attributed to hedge funds, and how they differentiate from standard mutual funds, (page 103) Explain the investment strategies used by hedge funds to generate returns (page 104) Describe how hedge funds grew in popularity and their subsequent slowdown in 2008 (page K)4) Explain the fee structure for hedge funds, and the use of high-water marks and hurdle rates, (page 105) Assess academic research on hedge fund performance, (page 105) Explain how hedge funds helped progress die financial markets, (page 106) Descrihe the liquidity of hedge fund investments and die usage of lock-ups, gates and side pockets, (page 106) Compare hedge funds to private equity and mutual funds, (page 107) Descrihe funds of funds and provide arguments for and against using them as an investment vehicle, (page 107) 60 Hedge Fund Investment Strategies Candidates, after completing this reading, should he able to: Descrihe equity-based strategies of hedge funds and their associated execution mechanics, return sources and costs, (page ] 12) Summarize how macro strategies are used to generate returns by hedge funds* (page 113) Explain the common arbitrage strategies of hedge funds, including fixed-incomebased arbitrage, convertible arbitrage and relative value arbitrage, (page 113) Descrihe the mechanics of an arbitrage strategy using an example, (page 115) Descrihe event-driven strategies, including activism, merger arbitrage and distressed securities, (page 16) ©2013 Kaplan, Inc Page Bonk Reading Assignment; and AIM Statements Explain the mechanic; involved in event-driven arbitrage, including their upside benefits and downside risks, (page I IS) Describe and interpret a numerical example of the following strategies: merger arbitrage, pairs trading, distressed investing and global macro strategy, (page 119} Overview of Private Equity Candidates, after completing this reading, should be able to: I Describe and differentiate between major types of private equity investment activities, (page 125) Describe die basic structure of a private equity fund and its sources and uses of cash, (page 125) Describe private equity funds of funds and die secondary markets for private equity (page 126) Describe the key characteristics of a private equity transaction, (page 127) Identify the key participants in a private equity transacdon and the roles they play (page 127) Identify and describe methods of funding private equity transactions, (page 12B) Identify issues related to the interaction between private equity firms and die management of target companies, (page 129) Describe typical ways of capitalizing a private equity portfolio company, (page 129) Describe the potential impact of private equity transactions, including leveraged recapitalizations, on target companies, (page 130) 62 Hedge Funds Candidates, after completing this reading, should be able to: I Describe die characteristics of hedge funds and die hedge fund industry, and compare hedge funds widi mutual funds, (page 135) Explain die evolution of the hedge fund industry and describe landmark events which precipitated major changes in the development of the industry, (page 135) Describe die different hedge fund strategies, explain their return characteristics, and describe the inherent risks of each strategy, (page 136) Describe die historical performance trend of hedge funds compared to equity indices, and evaluate statistical evidence related to the strategy of investing in a portfolio of top performing hedge funds, (page 139) Descrihe the market events which resulted in a convergence of risk factors for different hedge fund strategies, and explain the impact of such a convergence on portfolio diversification strategies, (page 140) Describe the problem of risk sharing asymmetry hetween principals and agents in the hedge fund industry, (page 141} Explain the impact of institutional investors on die hedge fund industry and assess reasons for the trend towards growing concentration of assets under management (AUM} in die industry, (page 141} 63 Risk Management lor Hedge Funds: Introduction and Overview Candidates, after completing this reading, should be able to: Compare and contrast the investment perspectives between institutional investors anti hedge fund managers, (page 146) Explain how proper risk management can itself he a source of alpha for a hedge fund, (page 147) Page ©2013 Kaplan, Inc Book Statements and AIM Reading Assignments Explain die limitations of the VaR measure in capturing the spectrum of hedge fund risks, {page 148) Explain how survivorship bias poses a challenge for hedge fund return analysis (page 150) Describe how dynamic investment strategies complicate the risk measurement process for hedge funds, (page 151) Describe how the phase-locking phenomenon and nonlinearities in hedge fund returns can he incorporated into risk models, (page 153) Explain how autocorrelation of returns can be used as a measure of liquidity of the asset, (page 155) 64 Trust and Delegation Candidates, after completing this reading, should he able to: Explain the role of third party due diligence firms in the delegated investment decision-making process, (page 161) Explain how past regulatory and legal problems with hedge fund reporting relates to expected future operational events, (page 63) 3- Explain the role of the due diligence process in successfully identifying inadequate or failed internal process, (page 164) 65 Madoff: A Riot of Red Flags Candidates, after completing this reading, should be able to: Describe Bernard MadofF Investment Securities (BMIS) and its business lines (page 169) Explain what is a split-strike conversion strategy, (page 170) Describe the returns reported on MadoiF’s feeder funds, (page 171) Explain how the securities fraud at BMLS was caught, (page 171) Describe the operational red flags at BMIS conflicting with the investment professions standard practices, (page 171) Describe investment red flags that demonstrated inconsistencies in BMIS' investment style, (page 172) 66 Sovereign Creditworthiness and Financial Stability: An International Perspective Candidates, after completing this reading, should be able to: Explain three key initial conditions that helped spread of the economic crisis globally among sovereigns, (page 178) Describe three ways in which the financial sector risks are transmitted to sovereigns (page 179) Describe five ways in which sovereign risks are transmitted to the financial sector (page ISO) Summarize the activity of hanks and sovereigns in die European Union during die 2002-2007 period leading up to die economic crisis, (page 180) Summarize the activity of banks and sovereigns in the European Union during die economic crisis, (page 181) Describe how risks were transmitted among banks and sovereigns in the European Union during the economic crisis, giving specific examples, (page H 1) Describe the economic condition of the European financial sector in 2012, and explain some possihle policy implementation that can help mitigate the spread of future crises, (page 183) ©2013 Kaplan, Inc Page — Topic 61 Cross Reference to CARP Assigned Reading Stowell, Chapter 16 Specialist investment funds may he established with the purpose of purchasing other private equity interests in die secondary markets, perhaps at bargain prices PRIVATE EQUITY CHARACTERISTICS AJM 61.4: Describe the key characteristics of a private equity transaction A private equity investment fund has secured deht and equity funding typically from institutional investors or pension funds, but sources of capital investment can also include insurance firms, endowments, fund of funds, or high-ner-worch individuals Sovereign wealth funds, hedge funds, or even banks may also make a private equity investment The transactions involve high levels of deht, and firms with good cash flow are targeted so that die debt can be paid down quickly, from operating earnings and also sale(s) of portions of the business, excess assets, and so forth The equity portion of the investment is generally 30—40% of die purchase price; the rest is debt Different levels of debt include senior debt, provided by hanks and secured by die firms assets, and also subordinated deht, which Is unsecured This type of high-yield debt Is raised in the high-yield capital markets If the target is a public company, the buyout will make it private, and the goal is to restructure die firm and bring it back public in usually 3—7 years In a private equity transaction, die internal rate of return (IRR) goal is over 20%, but this is dependent on the degree of leverage and the ability of the firm to pay down die debt General partners are incentivized to make the transaction work with typically 20% of the profits, and they work alongside limited partners An ideal private equity transaction wifi involve highly motivated management, strong cash flow, a balance sheet which can be further leveraged, low capital investments, good quality assets, and a simation in which asset sales can be realized and cost cutdng can be performed There are a variety of participants in these private equity transactions, including die private equity firm, investment banks, high-net-worth investors and institutional investors, management of the firm, and ail assortment of lawyers, accountants, and tax experts PRIVATE EQUITY PARTICIPANTS AIM 61.5: Identify the key participants in a private equity transaction and the roles they play Private Equity Firms This entity selects the LBO target with input from the investment hank hired The private equity firm negotiates die price and arranges the financing The firm then oversees management of the firm and will take a place on the board of directors The firm makes all ©2013 Kaplan, Inc Page 127 Topic 61 Cross Reference to GASP Assigned Reading Stowell, Chapter 16 - the major financial and strategic decisions and puts together, with the assistance from the investment hank, the exit strategy Investment Banks The investment banker helps select the target investments, helps negotiate the price and the structure of the end re transaction, underwrites loans or participates in die syndicated hank loan facility, and occasionally helps widi recapitalizations of the firm The investment hanking firm will work with the private equity firm on the exit strategy and can also underwrite debt or provide large dividends for the private equity firm The fees earned by investment banking firms are substantial Investors High-net-worth and insdtutional investors participate in diese investments as limited partners and sign investment contracts that can lock up funds for 10-1 years Limited partners agree to contribute capital over time, and it may be years before all the limited partner funds are drawn down The goal is implementation of an exit strategy, at which point any investments are turned into cash Management Management of the targeted firm may co-in vest with the private equity fund and receive stock options, which provide incentives to be successful Generally, a successful exit can happen within 3-7 years after the acquisition If things not go well, the options will expire worthless and the management may he fired Lawyers/Accouutants/Tax Experts Many professional service firms, such as lawyers, accountants, and tax experts, work closely with private equity firms and investment banks to provide advice and assistance on a variety of private equity activities FUNDING PHIVATH EQUITY THAN SACTIONS AIM 61.6: Identify and describe methods of funding private equity transactions A private equity transaction is typically a transaction involving a company or a business unit It is acquired widi debt secured Ivy the company's own assets, along with equity funding from the general partners (private equity firm) and limited partners (institutions, high-net-worth investors, endowments, fund of funds, sovereign wealth funds, hedge funds, or even banks) — Equity investment is usually 3t> 40% of die purchase price, and the balance of the cost of the acquisition comes from various types of debt financing, including collateralized bank Page 128 ©2013 Kaplan, Inc — Topic 61 Cross Reference to CARP Assigned Reading Stowell, Chapter 16 borrowing through revolving credit facilities, term loans, mezzanine debt, and even highyield bonds issued in the public markets Debt levels in diese transactions grew higher and higher through m id-2007 but have decreased a bit after the credit crisis in 200 H, AIM 61.7: Identify issues related to the interaction between private equity firms and the management of target companies Tdeally die private equity firm will make arrangements with management, allowing them to participate in the eventual success of the transaction The participation can be in the form of post-closing option grants, or rollover equity, which is the amount of stock that management must purchase in order to participate in the transacdon Teaming with management is a hit tricky, because the target firm’s hoard may have its actions scrutinized and these acdons may become subject to the entirefairness test The firm being acquired must he careful that the transacdon is fair to shareholders What must be avoided is a transacdon where the private equity firm teams up with a controlling shareholder, who may even be the CEO This may be perceived as disadvantageous to die odier shareholders There is no clear definition of controlling shareholder; it could he a 40% shareholder or even a smaller percentage If in fact, the fairness of the transaction is challenged, the burden of proof is on the target firm The hoard of directors of the target firm may set up a special committee to examine the fairness of a transaction in order to forestall any challenges down the road IJI addition, the private equity firm teaming up with management can possihly trigger a target firm’s takeover defenses, such as poison pills, if management owns more than 15% of the target firm’s stock Private equity firms also must he careful with disclosure; if there is a pre-signing arrangement with management, the SEC may require early disclosure of the transacdon A transaction may also be what is termed a management buyout (MBO) This is when management takes the lead and orchestrates a private transacdon These can be complicated because management’s investment horizon may be longer than the private equity firm’s horizon, and bodi parties need to align the return objeedves CAPITALIZATION OP A PRIVATE EQUITY PORTPOLIO COMPANY AIM 61.8: Describe typical ways of capitalizing a private equity portfolio company The primary component is debt, comprising 60—70% of die overall capital structure This debt can consist of various types: • Senior hank debt-revolving creditfacility It is borrowed against, or paid down, and re¬ * borrowed against, as needed Senior andsubordinated term debt Typically carries floating rates ©2013 Kaplan, Inc Page 129 — Topic 61 Cross Reference to GASP Assigned Reading Stowell, Chapter 16 • Junior debt High-yield debt issued dirough die capital markets, • Junior debt-mezzanine debt These are typically subordinated notes sold to banks, institutional investors, and hedge funds The junior debt can incorporate features including warrants and payment-in-kind (P1K) toggle (allows for increase in principal and no interest payment) The remaining capital structure is equity, comprising 30—40% of the total It can be in the form of common or preferred stock AIM 61.9: Describe the potential impact of private equity transactions, including leveraged recapitalizations, on target companies A leveraged recapitalization of a private equity fund portfolio firm is when die target company issues a large additional amount of debt at a time after the acquisition is completed in order for the private equity fund to receive a large dividend This enhances private equity returns, but puts additional stress on the firm, making the debt increasingly risky due to high interest payments and fees The firm’s existing dcht can decline in value because the firm's overall risk level is heightened A leveraged recapitalization can also negatively affect the equity holders and even the target firm's community If die firm fails because of its inability to make increased debt payments, jobs are lost and the community is negatively impacted Communities can lose a significant tax base Page 130 ©2013 Kaplan, Inc Topic 61 Cross Reference to GARP Assigned Reading Stowed, Chapter — KEY CONCEPTS AJM 61.1 In a leveraged buyout (LBO), an investment firm buys out a target firm and takes it private, using a large amount of debt Minority equity investments add growth capital to a firm to expand, restructure, or make their own acquisition Mezzanine capital is an investment in subordinated debt or preferred stock in a firm Venture capital is an investment in start-ups or less mature public firms to finance a launch or early stages of expansion AJM 61.2 A private equity fund is run by the general partner with additional investment supplied by limited partners The general partner is paid an annual management fee of 1-3% of assets under management and 20% of the profits Ideally, die exit strategy is realized within 3-7 years of the first investment AIM 61.3 A private equity fund of funds obtains investments from individuals and institutions and spreads investments among many different private equity funds This gives more investors access to the best managers due to significant due diligence There is a secondary market for private equity investments, and any sales usually have to be approved by the general partner Specialist investment funds may be established widi die purpose of purchasing odier private equity interests in the secondary markets, perhaps at bargain prices AIM 61.4 Private equity investment funds obtain sources of capital from institutions, endowments, fund of funds, and high-net-worth investors Ideal target firms have strong cash flow so that debt can he paid down quickly Debt generally finances up to 70% of the acquisition price, secured by the target firm’s own assets Target IRR is generally above 20% Management may participate in the success of the deal and receive additional incentives AIM 61.5 There are a variety of partici pants in private equity transactions, including the private equity firm, investment banks, high- net-worth investors and institutional investors, management of the firm, and an assortment of lawyers, accountants, and tax experts All parties work to restructure the target firm, sell off assets not needed, cut costs, and implement an exit strategy between 3-7 years of die initial investment ©2013 Kaplan, Inc Pagp 131 Topic 61 Crass Reference to GASP Assigned Reading Stowe11, Chapter 16 - AIM 61.6 A private equity transaction is typically a transaction involving a company ora business unit It is acquired with debt secured by the company's own assets, along with equity funding from the general partners and limited partners Equity investment is usually 30—40% of the purchase price, and the halance of the cost of the acquisition comes from various types of deht financing AJM 61.7 Management often participates in private equity transactions, but this has to he done carefully so as not to disadvantage shareholders The hoard of directors must he certain of the fairness of the transaction AIM 61 K A private equity portfolio company is capitalized through dehL (60—70%) and contributed equity (30—40%) of the acquisition price Both senior and junior debt is used, and the equity can he in the form of common or preferred stock AIM 61.9 A leveraged recapitalization of a private equity fund portfolio firm is when the target company issues a large additional amount of debt at a time after the acquisition is completed in order for the private equity fund to receive a large dividend This can put stresses on the firm and make it quite difficult for the firm to make debt payments This can create a ripple effect if the firm fails, it negatively impacts the community, and employees lose their jobs — Page 132 ©2013 Kaplan, Inc Topic 61 Cross Reference to GARP Assigned Reading StoweU, Chapter 16 — CONCEPT CHECKERS 1, In a private equity transaction, how would carried interest best be described? A Mezzanine debt provided by banks, Eh Bridge financing provided by investment bankers C Percent of general partner profit participation D Limited partner investment level How often does a private equity firm raise funds for a new private equity fund? A Every 2-3 years B Every 3-5 years C Every 3-7 years D Annually In a private equity transaction, what is the or subordinated term for an investment in preferred stock debt? A Growdi capital B Bridge financing C Senior term debt D Mezzanine capital After the credit crisis, which began in mid-2007, diere were some changes in the nature and structure of private equity transactions Which of the following is least likely co he one of these changes? A Greater volume of transactions B More equity contribution C Less favorable debt terms D Longer holding periods Various parties participate as limited partners in private equity transactions Which of these would be least likely to participate in a private equity transaction as a limited partner? A Banks B Private equity firm C .Sovereign wealth funds D Endowments ©2013 Kaplan, Tnc Page 133 Topic 61 Cross Reference to GASP Assigned Reading Stowall, Chapter 16 — CONCEPT CHECKER ANSWERS C Private equity firms, and the general partners, receive curry or carried interest, which is a percentage of profits (usually 20%) B Three to five years Ls a typical time frame D Mezzanine capital Ls an investment in preferred stock or subordinated debt without having voting control These securities often have warrants attached A The credit crisis actually caused a decline in the number of transactions B Private equity firms participate as general partner Other participants in private equity transactions arc institutions* highmet-worth investors, fund of funds, endowments, hedge funds* and banks Page 134 ©2013 Kaplan* Inc The following is i review of the Risk Management and Investment Management principles designed te address the AIM statements set forth by GART® This topic is also covered in: HEDGE FUNDS Topic 62 EXAM FOCUS The copic examines two decades of hedge fund performance Significant events that shaped the hedge fund industry ate discussed, including the growth of institutional investments Different hedge fund strategies are explained, along with the continuing growth of assets under management Performance is analyzed to see if the rewards justify the risks, and performance is compared widi the broad equity markets The performance of top fund managers is also compared to the performance across the hedge fund industry CHARACTERISTICS OP HEDGE FUNDS AIM 62.1: Describe the characteristics of hedge funds and the hedge fund industry, and compare hedge funds with mutual funds There are important dis unctions between hedge funds and mu mil funds Hedge funds are private, much less regulated investment vehicles, not available to die general public On the other hand, mutual funds are more structured and regulated Hedge funds are highly leveraged, and managers obtain profits from both long and short positions Hedge fund managers tend to take large bets based on perceived relative price discrepancies of assets Privacy is a hallmark of hedge funds There is litde transparency in the hedge fund industry because managers not want their methods copied A hedge fund charges a fixed management fee plus a healthy share of new profits from the fund, generally around 10-20% EVOLUTION OF THE HEDGE FUND INDUSTRY AIM 62.2: Explain the evolution of the hedge fund Industry and describe landmark events which precipitated major changes in the development of the industry Historical data on hedge fund performance was difficult to obtain prior to die early 199 (Is In early 1994, dramatic losses triggered by a Federal Reserve change in interest rate policy had a large impact on hedge fund performance reporting This prompted the development of hedge fund databases so that participants could belter ohtain and analysis hedge fund performance Assets under management have increased ten times from 1997 to 2010 as the numher of funds has quadrupled There are some hedge funds that nor participate in commercial databases, which impacts aggregate hedge fund performance Thus, diere is selection bias, also known as self-reporting bias, contained in hedge fund databases ©2013 Kaplan, Inc Page 135 — Topic 62 Cross Reference to GASP Assigned Reading Constantimdes et al., Chapter 17 There is evidence that suggests that selection bias in Luge hedge fund databases is actually small The average return of funds-of-hedge funds (FOHF), comprised of managers who theoretically invest across all hedge funds* not just funds reported to commercial databases* is highly correlated to the average return of hedge funds in commercial databases However* there are still concerns about possible measurement errors and various hiases in reported hedge fund returns The consensus is that hedge fund index returns became increasingly reliable beginning in 1996 Prior to 1996, looking at the period from 1987 to 1996* 27 large hedge funds substantially outperformed the S&P 50 U index The outperformance is high* which is more than enough to account for any measurement biases The collapse of Long-Term Capital Management (LTCM) in 1998 was a watershed event in the hedge fund industry It was a reminder that higher returns are accompanied by higher risk The LTCM collapse had a much greater effect on hedge fund performance compared to equity performance The time period of 2000 co 2001 brought the dot-com buhble collapse During this period, the hedge fund industry experienced a 20% net asset inflow and there was a major shift in the hedge fund industry structure Hedge funds outperformed the S&P 500 with half of the S&P 500 standard deviation* As a result, institutional investors poured money into hedge funds From 1999 to 2007, hedge funds' assets under management went from $197 billion to $1.39 trillion Investors in hedge funds thus shifted from exclusively private wealth to institutions, including foundations, endowments, pension funds, and insurance companies Evidence suggests that these institutional investors were rewarded from 2002 to 2010 with high returns, due in large part to bearing credit and emerging market risks HEDGE FUND STRATEGIES AIM 62.3: Describe the different hedge fund strategies) explain their return characteristics, and describe the inherent risks of each strategy Managed Futures and Global Macro Managed futures funds focus on investments in bond, equity, commodity futures, and currency markets around the world Systematic trading programs are used which rely on historical pricing data and market trends A high degree of leverage is employed because futures contracts are used With managed futures, there is no net long or net short bias Many managed futures funds are market timing funds* which switch between stocks and Treasuries When both short and long positions are considered, die payoff function of this strategy is similar to a lookback straddle, which is a combination of a lookback call option and a lookback put option The lookback call option gives the owner the right to purchase the underlying instrument at the lower price during the call options life, while the lookback put option gives the owner the right to sell die underlying instrument at die highest price during the put options life Page 136 ©2013 Kaplan* Inc Cross Reference to GASP Assigned Reading — Topic 62 Consrantmides et ah, Chapter 17 Global macro fund managers make large bets on directional movements in interest rates, exchange rates, commodities, and stock indices They are dynamic asset allocators, betting on various risk factors over time Both managed futures and global macro funds have trendfollowing behavior (i.e., directional styles) Global macro funds better during extreme moves in die currency markets Both of these strategies are essentially asset allocation strategies, since the managers take opportunistic bets in different markets They also both have a low return correlation to equities MergeURisk Arbitrage and Distressed Securities Merger (or risk) arbitrage strategies try to capture spreads in merger/acquisition transactions involving public companies, following public announcement of a transaction The primary risk is deal risk, or die risk that die deal will fail to close Examining merger arbitrage returns, the largest negative monthly returns in this strategy are after the S&P 500 index: has had a large negative return This equates to being long deal risk The logic is that when the market has a large decline, mergers have a greater tendency to be called off Distressed hedge funds is another event-driven hedge fund style This strategy invests across the capital structure of firms that ate under financial or operational distress, or ate in die middle of bankruptcy The strategy tends to have a long bias Widi this strategy, hedge fund managers try to profit from an issuer's ability to improve its operation, or come out of a bankruptcy successfully A key feature of the strategy is long exposure to credit risk of corporations with low credit ratings A good proxy for these types of returns is publicly traded high-yield bonds since die correlation between the DJCS Distress index and high-yield bonds is 0.55 En sum, bodi of these event-driven strategies exhibit nonlinear return characteristics, since tail risk appears under extreme market conditions Widi merger arbitrage, the tail risk is a large drop in equity investments With distressed hedge funds, the tail risk is a big move in short-term races Unlike trend following strategies, event-driven funds are hurt by extreme market movements Fixed Income Arbitrage Fixed income arbitrage funds attempt to obtain profits by exploiting inefficiencies and price anomalies between related fixed income securities The fund managers try to limit volatility by hedging exposure to interest rate risk An example of this strategy is leveraging long/short positions in fixed income securities chat are related—mathematically or economically The sectors traded under fixed income arbitrage include: • Credit yield curve relative value trading of swaps, government securities, and futures Volatility trading using options * * Mortgage-backed securities arbitrage ©2013 Kaplan, Tnc Page 137 Topic 62 Cross Reference to GARP Assigned Reading Constanti aides et ah* Chapter 17 - A swap spread trade is a bet that die fixed side of the spread will stay higher dian the floating side of die spread, and stay in a reasonable range according to historical trends, With yield-curve spread trades, the hope is that bond prices will deviate from the overall yield curve only in the short term, and will revert to normal spreads over time Mortgage spread trades are bets on prepayment rates, while fixed income volatility trades are bets that die implied volatility of interest rate caps have a tendency to he higher than the realized volatility of, for example, a Eurodollar futures contract Capital structure or credit arbitrage trades try to capitalize on mispricing among different types of securities (e.g., equity and debt) Convertible Arbitrage Convertible arbitrage funds attempt to profit from the purchase of convertible securities and the shorting of corresponding stock, taking advantage of a perceived pricing error made in the security's conversion factor The number of shares shorted is based on a delta neutral or market neutral ratio The plan is for the combined position to he insensitive to underlying stock price fluctuations under normal market conditions The return to convertible arbitrage hedge funds comes from the liquidity premium paid by issuers of convertible bonds to hedge fund managers, for holding convertible bonds and managing the inherent risk by hedging die equity part of die bonds Long/ Short Equity Long/short equity funds take bodi long and short positions in die equity markets, diversifying or hedging across sectors, regions, or market capitalizations Examples are shifts from value to growth, small- to mid-cap stocks, and net long to net short Trades in equity futures and options can also take place, Thirty to forty percent of hedge funds are long/short Long/short managers are stock pickers with varying opinions and abilities, so performance tends to be very idiosyncratic, Underpriced or under-researched stocks are favored, as are small stocks, on the long side On the short side, low liquidity makes small stocks and foreign stocks less attractive Long/short equity funds have directional exposure to the overall market and also have exposure to long small-cap/short large-cap positions Dedicated Short Bias Funds with a dedicated short bias tend to take net short positions in equities Sometimes the short position strategy is implemented by selling forward To manage risk, managers take offsetting long positions and stop-loss positions The returns ate negatively correlated with equities Emerging Markets Emerging market funds invest in currencies, debt, equities, and other instruments in countries with emerging or developing markets These markets are usually identified in Page 13H ©2013 Kaplan, Inc Topic 62 Cross Reference to CARP Assigned Reading - Constantin ides et aJ., Chapter 17 of gross national product (GNP) per capita, China, India, Latin America, Southeast Asia, parts of Eastern Europe, and parts of Africa are examples of emerging markets These funds have a long bias because it is more difficult to short securities in emerging markets terms Equity Market Neutral When reviewing equity market neutral hedge fund strategies, research shows that there is not one common component (or risk factor) in their returns Different funds utilize different trading strategies, but diey all have a similar goal of trying to achieve zero beta(s) against a broad set of equity indices, HEDGE FUND PERFORMANCE AIM 62.4: Describe the historical performance trend of hedge funds compared to equity indices, and evaluate statistical evidence related to the strategy of investing in a portfolio of top performing hedge funds Twenty-seven large hedge funds were identified in 2000, and research has been done to determine if these hedge fonds are truly a separate asset class, not correlated to equity or bond indices Hedge fund returns were regressed against an 8-factor model used to analyze hedge fund performance Findings were that hedge fund portfolios had no significant exposure to stocks and bonds As an equally weighted portfolio, this portfolio of 27 top performing hedge funds had a large alpha of 1.48% per month There was a persistent exposure to emerging markets, but other factor betas showed a lot of variability Also, alpha declined over time, and diere was not a persistent directional exposure to die U.S, equity market Measurement bias may have affected these results somewhat, Alternatively, a strategy of investing in a portfolio of the top 50 large hedge funds was tested using data, from 2002 to 2010 Two test portfolios were constructed: * * The Erst test portfolio attempted to mimic performance of a strategy of investing in die top funds in equal dollar amounts, and rebalancing at the end of each calendar yean The funds were selected based on the assets under management at year-end 2001 A similar portfolio was constructed using top funds based on year-end 2010, rather than 2001 For the first portfolio, die intent was to give a lower and upper bound of performance which investors could achieve, by just following a strategy of investing equally in the cop 50 large hedge funds, and rebalancing yearly The second portfolio was ‘'foresight assisted.'’ In evaluating performance characteristics, the first portfolio did not have a significant alpha, while the foresight-assisted portfolio had a monthly alpha of 0.53%, and was statistically significant at die 1% level Compared to hedge fund returns prior to 2002, die decline in alpha is consistent with the thinking that die re is more competition in the hedge fund industry Tt should, however, be noted diat there is no significant negative alpha Looking at die top 50 hedge funds versus all hedge funds, the top 50 portfolios (bodi versions) demonstrated statistically significant alpha relative to the DJCSI and HFRI ©2013 Kaplan, Inc Page 139 Topic 62 Cross Reference to GARP Assigned Reading Gonstantinides et ak, Chapter 17 - hedge fund indices The strategy of buying large hedge funds appears performance compared to just investing in hedge fund indices, to deliver superior During the 2002 to 2010 time period, the top 50 hedge fund portfolios (with the exception of the foresight-assisted portfolio), and the two hroad hedge fund indices, DJCSI and HFRI, all outperformed the equity market, as measured by the S&F 500 index In sum, analysis of large hedge funds shows that managers are still delivering alpha return relative to peers, and also have low exposure to the U.S equity market These factors continue to attract institutional investors CONVERGENCE OF RISK FACTORS AJM 62.5: Describe the market events which resulted in a convergence of risk factors for different hedge fond strategies, and explain the impact of such a convergence on portfolio diversification strategies Theoretically, diversification among hedge fund strategies should protect investors, but there are certain events that affect all, or mostly all, strategies, as they all undergo stress at the same time Portfolio diversification implodes, and seemingly diverse hedge fund portfolios converge in terms of risk factors during limes of stress The first recorded major market event for hedge funds was in March and April of 1994 when unexpected changes in interest rate policy were set by the Federal Reserve, This caused two mondis of losses by seven of the ten style-specific sub-indices in die DJCS family Exceptions were shore sellers and managed futures funds Merger arbitrage funds earned a positive return in March, while equity market neutral funds had a positive return in April Another major event was in August 1998 right before die collapse of LTCM Eight of the ten niche DJCS style sub-indices had large losses Short sellers and managed forures funds avoided losses The Josses occurred primarily due to market-wide liquidation of risky assets and the high amount of leverage on LTCM's balance sheet With hedge fund investing, leverage has a magnifying effect on gains and losses, and risk is on both sides of the balance sheet There were events prior to the 2007-2008 financial crisis that illustrated how much a market-wide funding crisis can significantly impair leveraged positions In August 2007, for the first time, all nine specialist style sub-indices lost money The only positive return was from short sellers During die peak of the financial crisis from July to Octoher 2008, July to September brought losses for all hedge fund styles (excluding short sellers) When leveraged positions are forced to liquidate, losses can he high The point is that when there Is a market-wide funding crisis, it is difficult to mitigate risk by simply spreading capital among different hedge fond strategies There is significant credit-driven tail risk in a hedge fund portfolio The use of managed futures may be a partial solution it has been a strategy with a convex performance profile relative to other hedge fund strategies Hedge fund investors need to consider portfolio risks associated with dramatic market events — Page 140 ©2013 Kaplan, Inc Cross Reference to GASP Assigned Reading - Topic 62 Constant inides et ah, Chapter 17 RISK SHARING ASYMMETRY AJM 62.6: Describe the problem of risk sharing asymmetry between principals and agents in the hedge fund industry In die hedge fund industry, risk sharing asymmetry between die principal (investor) and the agent (fund manager) is a concern due to variable compensation schemes* The problem occurs when the incentive fee that a hedge fund manager is entitled to, typically 15-20% of new profits [profits above a high water mark (HWM)J, encourages a fund manager to take outsized risks This tends to increase the future loss-carried-forward if and when diese bets fail If the fund fails, the same fund manager can start up a new hedge fundHowever, there is an opportunity cost involved in cases where a hedge fund manager closes a fund It is cosdy in terms of harming the track record of the manager and affects reputation risk of both the manager and the fund company All things considered, this cost does not totally mitigate the basic principal) agent conflict* Investors may he hesL served to invest in funds for which the fund managers invest a good portion of their own wealdi As much as this Issue has been discussed, the basic structure of how fund managers are compensated has not changed IMPACT OF INSTITUTIONAL INVESTORS AIM 62.7: Explain the impact of institutional investors on the hedge fund industry and assess reasons for the trend towards growing concentration of assets under management (AUM) in the industry As mentioned earlier, beginning in 2000, institutional investor funds flowed into hedge funds, and assets under management in the hedge fund industry grew from $197 billion at 1999 year-end to $1.39 trillion by 2007 year-end Institutional investors were rewarded for allocating capital to a much higher fee environment Three hedge fund performance databases, DJCSI, HFRI, and HFRFOFI, respectively, reported cumulative performance of 72.64%, 69.82%, and 38.18% from the 2002 to 2010 time period, compared to the S&P 500 index return of 13.5% The Sdd? 500 index had a 16% standard deviation during that period, versus annualized standard deviations of return of 5.84%, 6*47%, and 5.51%, for the respective hedge fund indices With the increase of institutional investment came greater demands on hedge fund management for operational integrity and governance Some institutional investors were seeking absolute performance, while others were seeking alternative sources of return beyond equities There is some concern that there is no identifiable alpha associated with hedge fund investing, so it Is increasingly important that hedge fund managers differentiate themselves from their peers ©2013 Kaplan, Inc Pagp 141 ... 20 3 21 5 22 H 23 5 RISK MANAGEMENT AND INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT; CURRENT ISSUES IN FINANCIAL MARKETS 25 3 PAST FRM EXAM QUESTIONS 25 9 FORMULAS 27 1 APPENDIX 27 5 INDEX 27 9 20 13 Kaplan, Inc Page FKM PART. .. 97ft-1- 42 7 7 47 4-6 l M277 -44 74 -2 PPN: 320 0- 3 24 2 Required Disclaimer: GAftP11 dues not diduite, promote, review, nr furnt die icoinry uf (lie pfiiJiicLÿ or services ulleredby Kaplan Sdiweret ofFRM®... portfolio: | $4 op2V2 ,[S4J2]o0.0 62 0.1 42 0.0576+0,07 84. 0.136 This value is in (S millions )2 VaR is then the square root of die portfolio variance times 1.65: VaR = (1.65) ($368,7 82) = $608 ,49 0 Professors

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