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Chapter 04

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Conflict Of Interest In 401(K) Funds, Steven D. Dolvin Mar 2016

Conflict Of Interest In 401(K) Funds, Steven D. Dolvin

All Chapters

Companies often hire third party administrators (TPAs) to manage their respective 401(k) plans. Some companies simply provide documentation and advice; however, other TPAs actually offer their own proprietary (in-house) funds as investment alternatives. New research () shows that these funds often carry higher fees and have lower returns, illustrating the impact of a conflict of interest. This is particularly pronounced for banks and insurance companies acting as TPAs.


Target Date Funds And Dollar Cost Averaging, Steven D. Dolvin Mar 2016

Target Date Funds And Dollar Cost Averaging, Steven D. Dolvin

All Chapters

Target Date Funds simplify the investment process for investors, as such funds oversee changing asset allocations through time. A secondary benefit is that with these "set it and forget it" funds, investors are less likely to try to time the market. This is good since such activity generally hurts (rather than helps) most investors. In fact, staying the course allows investors to benefit from downside market volatility, as continued investment enables investors to buy more shares at lower prices, so-called dollar cost averaging. See article here, WSJ.


Mutual Fund Fees Continue To Fall, Steven D. Dolvin Jan 2016

Mutual Fund Fees Continue To Fall, Steven D. Dolvin

All Chapters

Passive funds have historically outperformed active funds, and much of this difference is likely driven by the lower fees charged by passive funds. A discusses the impact on both investors and the industry.


Mutual Fund Fees, Steven D. Dolvin Jan 2016

Mutual Fund Fees, Steven D. Dolvin

All Chapters

As we all know, fees impact net returns. For mutual funds, aside from any load, the two primary fees charged are management fees and 12b-1 fees. The management fees are easy to understand. The 12b-1 fees, however, are not. They are designed to cover distribution costs, but this is a broad term. In reality, much of this fee is used to pay brokers/advisors for directing client business to the funds. As a recent article (Investment News) suggests, the SEC may begin to limit such payouts.


Are Etfs Good Or Bad?, Steven D. Dolvin Dec 2015

Are Etfs Good Or Bad?, Steven D. Dolvin

All Chapters

Like many questions, the right answer is probably, "it depends." Whether ETFs are the best investment vehicle for a particular person likely depends on their goals and needs. However, with trillions of dollars being held by ETFs, their size has necessitated a broader discussion of their merits. This is particularly true in light of recent pricing issues where ETFs traded well below their NAV (such as in August of this year, as well as during the "flash crash" in May 2010). See a good summary article here: WSJ.


Lower Minimum Investment, Steven D. Dolvin Nov 2015

Lower Minimum Investment, Steven D. Dolvin

All Chapters

Charles Schwab cut the initial minimum investment from $2,500 to $100 for most of the mutual funds on its Mutual Fund OneSource platform, which charges no transaction fees. At the same time, it cut the minimum for subsequent investments from $500 to $1. See article here, Financial Advisor Magazine.


Target Date Funds: Benefits And Disadvantages, Steven D. Dolvin Jun 2015

Target Date Funds: Benefits And Disadvantages, Steven D. Dolvin

All Chapters

Target date (i.e., lifecycle) funds are increasing in popularity, particularly among unsophisticated investors. These funds provide key benefits, as they automatically rebalance through time and also generally limit return chasing. Given the dollar cost averaging effect, the result may also be a higher (dollar-weighted) average return. On the downside, the target date funds may choose underlying funds in each category that benefit the fund family more than the investor. However, for most investors, the benefits would generally outweigh the potential disadvantages. See article here, WSJ.


Etf Trading, Steven D. Dolvin Apr 2015

Etf Trading, Steven D. Dolvin

All Chapters

ETFs are designed to track a particular underlying index. As these "baskets" of securities are traded, excessive demand or supply of shares can cause a disparity between the price of the ETF and the underlying value of securities held. However, because of the ability of large institutions to trade directly with the ETF firm to create and redeem shares, arbitrage keeps prices in line. See article here, WSJ.


Investing In Sin....., Steven D. Dolvin Feb 2015

Investing In Sin....., Steven D. Dolvin

All Chapters

Socially conscious investing has attracted numerous followers, and this has precipitated the development of many socially conscious mutual funds. In contrast, other investors have taken an alternative approach, opting for so-called "sin funds." As this WSJ article points out, these sin funds have actually performed quite well over the last 10 years.


Growth In Etf Assets Continues, Steven D. Dolvin Jan 2015

Growth In Etf Assets Continues, Steven D. Dolvin

All Chapters

Given the advantages of liquid trading and lower management fees, ETFs continue to add assets. As a recent Wall Street Journal article discusses, US ETF assets surpassed $2 Trillion and more asset managers are rolling out ETFs.


Fee Based Compensation Aligns Interests, Steven D. Dolvin Nov 2014

Fee Based Compensation Aligns Interests, Steven D. Dolvin

All Chapters

Retail financial professionals have increasingly moved away from commissions and to a standard fee-based structure. This change should better align the interests of clients and advisors. For example, there is less incentive to trade. Moreover, there is little need for advisors to select funds that charge a high load, as their compensation no longer depends on the "kickback" received from the fund companies. As a result, the fund flow to high load funds has turned negative. See article here, Investment News.


Vanguard Vs. The Industry, Steven D. Dolvin Aug 2014

Vanguard Vs. The Industry, Steven D. Dolvin

All Chapters

For years, Jack Bogle (the founder of Vanguard) has touted the benefit of passive investing, which is primarily driven by the relatively low fees they charge. Moreover, Bogle has highlighted the inability of active investors to outperform the market. Recent large investor flows into Vanguard products suggests that investors are increasingly agreeing with Bogle. See article here, WSJ.


Do Women Generate Better Returns?, Steven D. Dolvin Aug 2014

Do Women Generate Better Returns?, Steven D. Dolvin

All Chapters

Some prior research suggests that women make for better investors, primarily because they generally trade less than men (meaning lower transaction costs). However, a new fund aims to exploit the benefit women may provide as board members. The Barclays Women in Leadership ETN will invest in companies with a female CEO or a board that has a membership of at least 25% women. See here for an article that discusses the new fund (WSJ).

See previous post (ETFs vs. ETNs) for a discussion of the fund structure.


Fees Matter, Steven D. Dolvin May 2014

Fees Matter, Steven D. Dolvin

All Chapters

A 1% annual fee doesn't sound like much, but when compounded, fees paid to advisors and managers can have a significant impact on an investor's ending portfolio value. For example, consider two investors who each invest $200,000 and earn 8%/year (before fees) for 30 years. The first investor uses an ETF that charges 0.04%/year in fees, while the second investor uses a mutual fund charging 1.25%/year. The first investor ends with roughly $2 million, while the second nets about $1.4 million. The difference is purely driven by fees -- this is a huge cost. (See article here, Wall Street …


Active Vs. Passive, Steven D. Dolvin Mar 2014

Active Vs. Passive, Steven D. Dolvin

All Chapters

Market efficiency suggests that passive funds are the way to go, and average returns tend to support this. However, other investors prefer active strategies. Maybe the answer is not "either....or." As a recent Wall Street Journal article reports, both may provide benefits. See article here.


Levered Etfs, Steven D. Dolvin Feb 2014

Levered Etfs, Steven D. Dolvin

All Chapters

Levered ETFs are designed to track a particular benchmark, but in an exaggerated fashion. For example, the Pro Shares Ultra S&P500 (SS0) is a 2X fund, meaning its performance should be twice the level of the index. However, this performance only matches short term. In particular, since volatility reduces compounded returns, levered funds "lose" performance through time. In fact, some funds may actually produce a negative buy-and-hold return during even if the underlying benchmark was positive. Unfortunately, many retail investors are flocking to these funds without understanding their risks. (See article here, Reuters.)


Timing Matters -- Dollar Weighted Returns., Steven D. Dolvin Nov 2013

Timing Matters -- Dollar Weighted Returns., Steven D. Dolvin

All Chapters

While a mutual fund manager may make good decisions that result in a positive return, if investors time cash flows incorrectly, they will end up with lower (even negative) returns. This illustrates the difference between time weighted and dollar weighted returns. Unfortunately, the average investor succumbs to human nature, buying high and selling low, instead of the opposite. See a good summary article here, WSJ.


Even Adults Like "Happy Meals", Steven D. Dolvin Aug 2013

Even Adults Like "Happy Meals", Steven D. Dolvin

All Chapters

Higher risk companies, in order to sell bonds at lower interest rates, must often attach "sweetners" to the bond offering. Historically this has included warrants or conversion options. Recently, however, some companies have offered a combination of bonds and a loan of the company's shares, a so-called "Happy Meal." The bond buyers subsequently sell the shares short. If the company fails, the investors lose on the bonds, but make a profit on the short sale. This strategy is typically employed by hedge funds. See article here, Wall Street Journal.


Target Date Funds, Steven D. Dolvin May 2013

Target Date Funds, Steven D. Dolvin

All Chapters

Target Date (or "lifecycle") Funds are investments on "auto pilot." Fund managers allocate assets across funds based on the set (target) retirement date and manage the allocation accordingly as time passes. These funds are best suited as "all or nothing" investments, meaning investors should put all their money in a target date fund or else manage their assets on their own. Unfortunately, many investors allocate funds to lifecycle investments as if it were its own investment category. This is particularly true in retirement plans where participants often exhibit the "1/n" phenomenon, allocating there money equally across the "n" investments in …


Are Hedge Funds Worth It?, Steven D. Dolvin Jan 2013

Are Hedge Funds Worth It?, Steven D. Dolvin

All Chapters

Hedge funds typically charge high fees for their services -- generally a 2% yearly management fee plus 20% of profits. When this is factored in, most investors would be better off choosing a low cost ETF. See article here, The Economist.


Low Volatility Etfs, Steven D. Dolvin Dec 2012

Low Volatility Etfs, Steven D. Dolvin

All Chapters

A recent trend is the development of low volatility funds, including both ETFs and mutual. These funds invest in a subset of a specified index, selecting only those stocks with low price volatility (which may be identified by a low beta). There is not sufficient history to gauge the performance of such funds, but two issues are worth noting. First, given the impact of volatility on compounded returns (i.e., geometric averages are lower than arithmetic averages), low volatility funds should have an advantage, particularly in otherwise volatile markets. Second, value funds may outperform over long periods (albeit not every period), …


Index Etfs -- Not Created Equal, Steven D. Dolvin Nov 2012

Index Etfs -- Not Created Equal, Steven D. Dolvin

All Chapters

You might expect that all "Large Cap" ETFs are the same, as they would likely track the S&P500 index. However, in an effort to reduce costs, many ETF providers (such as Vanguard) are replacing the standard index with others that charge lower licensing fees. This allows the providers to either reduce the expenses they charge or increase operating margins. As providers make this switch, it could also impact the underlying holdings to the extent that differences occur across the indexes. See article here, Wall Street Journal.


"Alternative" Alternative Investments, Steven D. Dolvin Oct 2012

"Alternative" Alternative Investments, Steven D. Dolvin

All Chapters

Typical Alternative Investments include such categories as commodities and real estate. However, some investors have branched out into more esoteric assets such as cars and collectibles. As such, there is a growing category of managers offering such funds. See the article here, Wall Street Journal.


Target Date Funds, Steven D. Dolvin Aug 2012

Target Date Funds, Steven D. Dolvin

All Chapters

Target date funds (or lifecycle funds) have simplified the investment process for many people. However, they are not without their own potential problems and differences. This article (CNN Money) gives a good overview of the main issues.


Etfs Vs. Etns, Steven D. Dolvin Jul 2012

Etfs Vs. Etns, Steven D. Dolvin

All Chapters

While ETFs are essentially market-traded products that are similar to mutual funds, ETNs are actually more like a variable rate fixed income product that is "guaranteed" by the issuer. This difference adds a significant element of counterparty risk. Further, most ETNs are treated like partnerships, which means that taxes on gains (and losses) are treated differently, with recognition required each year (Statement K-1) rather than simply at sale. See a brief article here, USA Today.


Improving Alpha, Steven D. Dolvin Jul 2012

Improving Alpha, Steven D. Dolvin

All Chapters

Alpha is a measure of risk-adjusted performance. Positive alpha means an investment manager has generated returns in excess of what should have been earned given the level of risk taken. However, what if two funds have the same alpha--are they equally good? Well, tracking error helps to distinguish which fund might be better, as a lower tracking error might mean less risk and a more significant alpha. (See article here, Wall Street Journal.) The Information Ratio divides alpha by tracking error to provide a more comparable performance metric.


Mutual Fund Oversight, Steven D. Dolvin Jun 2012

Mutual Fund Oversight, Steven D. Dolvin

All Chapters

Like corporations, mutual funds have board of directors. However, they often exhibit much less oversight and control. Thus, there is debate whether they actually provide any value or simply serve as figureheads. See article here, Smart Money.


Actively Managed Etfs, Steven D. Dolvin Jun 2012

Actively Managed Etfs, Steven D. Dolvin

All Chapters

ETFs were originally designed as alternatives to index funds, but ones that could be actively traded like stocks -- meaning continuous trading and the ability to short and margin. As ETFs have developed, however, they are now moving into active (as opposed) to passive management. This may increase costs, but it provides another avenue for potential investors. See the article here, Index Universe.


Alternative Investments For The Masses, Steven D. Dolvin Jun 2012

Alternative Investments For The Masses, Steven D. Dolvin

All Chapters

Historically, hedge funds and private equity funds have only been available to qualified (i.e., rich) investors. However, new ETFs offer the opportunity for smaller investors to join the party. Check out the new AlphaClone ETF, which will be offered on the International Securities Exchange.


Popularity Of Alternative Investments Rises, Steven D. Dolvin May 2012

Popularity Of Alternative Investments Rises, Steven D. Dolvin

All Chapters

Alternative investments were once thought to be the domain of sophisticated, wealthy investors. However, they are gaining popularity among financial advisors (and their clients) as they realize the potential diversification benefits they provide. In particular, hedge funds and private equity funds are becoming increasingly common additions to even mid-market investors. (See article here, Reuters.)