Practical portfolio performance measurement and attribution / Carl R Bacon.

By: Bacon, Carl R [author.]
Language: English Publisher: Hoboken, NJ : Wiley, 2023Copyright date: ©2023Edition: Third editionDescription: 1 online resourceContent type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9781119831945; 9781119831976; 1119831970; 9781119831969; 1119831962; 9781119831952; 1119831954Subject(s): Investment analysis | Portfolio management | Business enterprises -- Finance | Corporations -- FinanceGenre/Form: Electronic books.Additional physical formats: Print version:: Practical portfolio performance measurement and attributionDDC classification: 332.6 LOC classification: HG4529Online resources: Full text available at Wiley Online Library Click here to view
Contents:
Table of Contents Contents Acknowledgements Contents Chapter 1 Introduction The Performance Measurement Process Role of performance analysts Book Structure Chapter 2 The Asset Management Industry Asset Classes Public Equities Bonds (or Fixed Income) Cash (and near cash) Private Assets Real Estate Private Equity Private Debt Infrastructure Natural Resources Commodities Derivatives Futures Forwards Swaps Contracts for Difference (CFD) Options Overlay Strategies Currency Hedge Funds Asset Allocation Strategic asset allocation Tactical asset allocation. Chapter 3 The Mathematics of Portfolio Return Simple Return Continuously Compounded (or logarithmic) Returns Money-weighted Returns (MWR) Internal Rate of Return (IRR) Ex-ante Internal Rate of Return Simple Internal Rate of Return Ex-post Internal Rate of Return Simple Dietz ICAA Method Modified Dietz Time-Weighted Returns (TWR) True Time-Weighted Unit Price Method Unit Price Method with Distributions Time-weighted versus Money-weighted Rates of Return Approximations to the Time Weighted Return Index Substitution Regression Method (or b method) Analyst’s Test Hybrid Methodologies Linked Modified Dietz BAI Method (or linked IRR) Which method to use? Late Trading and Market Timing Self-selection Large Cash Flow Self-selection of methodologies Annualised Returns Since Inception Internal Rate of Return (SI-IRR) Modified IRR (MIRR) Return Hiatus Gross and net of fee calculations Estimating gross and net of fee returns Initial Fees Performance Fees Asymmetric or Symmetric Crystallisation Performance Fees in Practice Equalization Reporting Hierarchy Overlay Strategies Overlay performance return calculations: Base currency and local returns Currency conversions Hedged Returns Currency Overlay Returns Perfectly Hedged Returns Portfolio Component Returns Money-weighted Component Returns End of day Beginning of day Intra-day weighted Differentiated Actual Time Rule-based Extremely large cash flows Which timing assumption to use for time-weighted returns? Carve Outs Sub-portfolios Cash Sectors Individual security returns Multi-period component returns Abnormal Returns Short Positions Contribution to return Composite returns Chapter 4 Benchmarks Benchmarks Benchmark attributes The Role of Benchmarks Types of Benchmarks Commercial Indexes Calculation methodologies Aggregate Price Index (Price-weighted Index or Carli type) Geometric (or Jevons type) Index Market Capitalisation Index Laspeyres Index Paasche Index Marshall – Edgeworth Index Fisher Index Equal weighted Indexes Fundamental Indexes Optimised Indexes (efficient or minimum variance indexes) Fixed Income Indexes Index Providers Choice of Index Provider Benchmark Regulation Choice of Index Currency Effects in Benchmark Hedged Indexes Customised Indexes Capped Indexes Peer Groups and Universes Percentile Rank Random Portfolios Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs) Target Returns Blended Benchmarks (or balanced benchmarks) Fixed Weight & Dynamised Benchmarks Spliced Indexes Money-weighted Benchmarks (or public market equivalents) Normal Portfolio Benchmark Statistics Index Turnover Up-capture Indicator Down-capture Indicator Up-number Ratio Down-number Ratio Up-percentage Ratio Down-percentage Ratio Percentage Gain Ratio Excess return Arithmetic Excess Return Geometric Excess Return Chapter 5 Risk Definition of Risk Risk types Risk management v Risk control Risk aversion Ex-post and ex-ante Descriptive Statistics Mean (or arithmetic mean) Mean absolute deviation (or mean deviation) Variance Bessel’s correction (population or sample, n or n-1) Sample variance Standard deviation (variability or volatility) Annualised risk (or time aggregation) The Central Limit Theorem Frequency and number of data points Normal (or Gaussian) distribution Histograms Skewness (Fisher’s or moment skewness) Sample skewness Kurtosis (Pearson’s kurtosis) Excess kurtosis (or Fisher’s kurtosis) Sample kurtosis Bera-Jarque statistic (or Jarque-Bera) Covariance Sample covariance Correlation (r) Sample correlation Performance appraisal Sharpe ratio (reward to variability, Sharpe index) Roy ratio Risk-free rate Alternative Sharpe ratio Revised Sharpe ratio Adjusted Sharpe Ratio Skew-adjusted Sharpe Ratio Relative risk Tracking error (or tracking risk, relative risk, active risk) Information ratio Geometric information ratio Modified information ratio Regression analysis Regression equation Regression alpha Regression beta Regression epsilon Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM) Beta (b) (systematic risk or volatility) Jensen’s alpha (Jensen’s measure or Jensen’s differential return or ex-post alpha) Annualised alpha Bull beta (b+) Bear beta (b-) Beta timing ratio Market timing Systematic risk Correlation R2(or coefficient of determination) Specific (or residual) risk Treynor ratio (Reward to volatility) Appraisal ratio (or Treynor-Black ratio) Factor Models Fama decomposition Selectivity Diversification Net selectivity Fama-French three factor model Three factor alpha (or Fama-French alpha) Carhart four factor model Four factor alpha (or Carhart’s alpha) Multi-factor Models Drawdown Average drawdown Maximum drawdown Largest individual drawdown Recovery time (or drawdown duration) Drawdown deviation Ulcer index Pain index Calmar ratio (or Drawdown ratio) MAR ratio Sterling ratio Sterling-Calmar ratio Burke ratio Modified Burke ratio Martin ratio (or Ulcer performance index) Pain ratio Partial Moments Downside risk (or semi-standard deviation) Downside potential Pure downside risk Half variance (or semi-variance) Upside risk (or upside uncertainty) Mean absolute moment Omega ratio (W) Bernardo & Ledoit (or gain–loss) ratio d ratio Omega-Sharpe ratio Sortino ratio Reward to half-variance Downside risk Sharpe ratio Sortino-Satchell ratio Kappa ratio Upside potential ratio Volatility skewness Variability skewness Farinelli-Tibiletti Ratio Prospect ratio Fixed Income Risk Pricing fixed income instruments Redemption yield (yield to maturity) Weighted average cash flow Duration (effective mean term, discounted mean term or volatility) Macaulay duration Macaulay-Weil duration Modified duration Portfolio duration Effective duration (or option-adjusted duration) Duration to worst Convexity Modified convexity Effective convexity Portfolio convexity Bond returns Duration beta Reward to duration Miscellaneous Risk Measures Hurst index (or Hurst exponent) Bias ratio Active Share Value at Risk (VaR) Risk-adjusted return M2 M2 excess return Differential return Adjusted M2 Skew-adjusted M2 Types of Excess Return (or Alpha) A Periodic Table of Risk Measures Periodic Table Design Why measure ex-post risk? Which risk measures to use? Hedge funds Smoothing Outliers Data mining Time Period Chapter 6 Return Attribution 280 What is Attribution? Definition Attribution as an asset management tool Early Development Types of Return Attribution Returns-based (regression or factor) Attribution Holdings-based (or buy/hold) Attribution Transaction-based Attribution Arithmetic Attribution Brinson, Hood & Beebower Asset Allocation Security (or Stock) Selection Interaction Brinson & Fachler Interaction Geometric Excess Return Attribution Asset allocation Stock selection Sector Weights Frequency of Analysis Security Level Attribution Transaction costs Off-benchmark (or zero weight sector) attribution Attribution consistent with the Investment Decision Process Market Neutral Attribution Attribution for 130/30 funds (or extended short funds) Leverage (or gearing) Attribution including derivatives Attribution including Equity Index Futures Attribution Analysis using options Multi-currency attribution Ankrim & Hensel Karnosky & Singer Geometric Multi-Currency Attribution Naïve Currency Attribution Compounding effects Geometric Currency Allocation Currency Timing Interest Rate Differentials Revised Currency Allocation Revised Country Allocation Incorporating Forward Currency Contracts Summarising Other Currency Issues Fixed Income Attribution The Yield Curve Yield curve analysis Shift Twist (or slope) Curvature (or butterfly) Carry Credit (or spread) Yield Curve Decomposition Wagner & Tito Weighted Duration Attribution Geometric Fixed Income Attribution Campisi Framework Yield Curve Decomposition Multi-period attribution Smoothing Algorithms Carino Menchero Linking Algorithms GRAP Method Frongello Davies & Laker Multi-period Geometric Attribution Annualisation of Excess Return Attribution Annualisation Contribution Analysis (or absolute return attribution) Risk-adjusted Attribution Selectivity Multi-level Attribution Balanced attribution Evolution of performance attribution methodologies Chapter 7 Performance Presentation Standards Why do we need performance presentation standards? Global Investment Performance Standards (GIPS®) – A history Advantages for Asset Managers The GIPS Standards Fundamentals of Compliance Definition of the Firm Maintaining Policies and Procedures Providing GIPS Reports Benchmark Selection Correcting Errors in GIPS Reports Composite Descriptions Recordkeeping Linking of theoretical and actual performance Portability Use of time-weighted or money-weighted returns Claiming Compliance with the GIPS standards. Input Data and Calculation Methodology Firm Assets, Composite Assets and Pooled Fund Assets Overlay Exposure Returns Valuation Time-Weighted Returns Money-weighted Returns Net Returns Composite Returns Private Market Investments Real Estate Net-of-fee Carve-outs returns Wrap fee, side pockets and subscription lines of credit Composite and Pooled Fund Maintenance Composite Maintenance Carve-Outs Presentation and Reporting Composite Time-weighted Return Report Returns, Dispersion & Risk Unobservable inputs, gross or net-of-fees, multiple benchmarks, breaks in performance, carve-outs and non-fee-paying portfolios Committed Capital and Advisory Assets Reporting currency, carve-outs, overlay strategies, wrap fees and supplemental information Composite Money-weighted Reports Composite Cumulative Committed Capital Total Value to Since-inception Paid in Capital (TVPI or Multiple of Investment Capital (MOIC) or Investment Multiple) Since-inception Distributions to Since-inception Paid-in Capital (Realisation multiple or DPI) Since-inception Paid-in Capital to cumulative Committed Capital (PIC Multiple) Residual Value to since-Inception Paid-in Capital (Unrealised Multiple or RVPI) Disclosures Claim of Compliance Firm, composite and benchmark definitions Fee disclosures Inception date, creation date, composite lists availability of policies and procedures, leverage and estimated transaction costs. Significant events, redefinition, minimum asset levels and withholding tax Conflicts with regulation, carve-out disclosures & sub-advisors. Benchmark Disclosures Significant cash flow disclosure and material errors. Risk measures, overlay strategy, real estate valuation and theoretical performance disclosures. Sample GIPS Composite Report GIPS Advertising Guidelines Fundamental requirements of the GIPS Advertising Guidelines GIPS Advertisements that do not include performance. GIPS advertisements for composites GIPS Advertisements for a Broad Distribution Pooled Fund Verification Performance Examination Achieving Compliance Maintaining Compliance GIPS Standards for Asset Owners Chapter 8 Bringing it all together Effective dashboards Data visualisation tools Manager Selection Asset Manager Selection Manager Evaluation Portfolio Evaluation Monitoring and Control The Four Dimensions of Performance Ex-post Return (The traditional dimension) Ex-post Risk (The neglected dimension) Ex-ante Return (The unknown dimension) Ex-ante Risk (The “sexy” dimension) Risk efficiency ratio Performance efficiency Risk control structure Risk management Glossary of Key Terms Appendix A - Simple Attribution Appendix B - Multi-Currency Attribution Methodology Bibliography Index
Summary: "Performance measurement and attribution are key tools in informing investment decisions and strategies. Performance measurement is the quality control of the investment decision process, enabling money managers to calculate return, understand the behavior of a portfolio of assets, communicate with clients and determine how performance can be improved. The process of adding value via benchmarking, asset allocation, security analysis, portfolio construction, and executing transactions is collectively described as the investment decision process. There are many stakeholders in the investment decision process; this book focuses on the investors or owners of capital and the firms managing their assets (asset managers or individual portfolio managers)"-- Provided by publisher.
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Includes bibliographical references and index.

Table of Contents
Contents

Acknowledgements

Contents

Chapter 1 Introduction

The Performance Measurement Process

Role of performance analysts

Book Structure

Chapter 2 The Asset Management Industry

Asset Classes

Public Equities

Bonds (or Fixed Income)

Cash (and near cash)

Private Assets

Real Estate

Private Equity

Private Debt

Infrastructure

Natural Resources

Commodities

Derivatives

Futures

Forwards

Swaps

Contracts for Difference (CFD)

Options

Overlay Strategies

Currency

Hedge Funds

Asset Allocation

Strategic asset allocation

Tactical asset allocation.

Chapter 3 The Mathematics of Portfolio Return

Simple Return

Continuously Compounded (or logarithmic) Returns

Money-weighted Returns (MWR)

Internal Rate of Return (IRR)

Ex-ante Internal Rate of Return

Simple Internal Rate of Return

Ex-post Internal Rate of Return

Simple Dietz

ICAA Method

Modified Dietz

Time-Weighted Returns (TWR)

True Time-Weighted

Unit Price Method

Unit Price Method with Distributions

Time-weighted versus Money-weighted Rates of Return

Approximations to the Time Weighted Return

Index Substitution

Regression Method (or b method)

Analyst’s Test

Hybrid Methodologies

Linked Modified Dietz

BAI Method (or linked IRR)

Which method to use?

Late Trading and Market Timing

Self-selection

Large Cash Flow

Self-selection of methodologies

Annualised Returns

Since Inception Internal Rate of Return (SI-IRR)

Modified IRR (MIRR)

Return Hiatus

Gross and net of fee calculations

Estimating gross and net of fee returns

Initial Fees

Performance Fees

Asymmetric or Symmetric

Crystallisation

Performance Fees in Practice

Equalization

Reporting Hierarchy

Overlay Strategies

Overlay performance return calculations:

Base currency and local returns

Currency conversions

Hedged Returns

Currency Overlay Returns

Perfectly Hedged Returns

Portfolio Component Returns

Money-weighted Component Returns

End of day

Beginning of day

Intra-day weighted

Differentiated

Actual Time

Rule-based

Extremely large cash flows

Which timing assumption to use for time-weighted returns?

Carve Outs

Sub-portfolios

Cash Sectors

Individual security returns

Multi-period component returns

Abnormal Returns

Short Positions

Contribution to return

Composite returns

Chapter 4 Benchmarks

Benchmarks

Benchmark attributes

The Role of Benchmarks

Types of Benchmarks

Commercial Indexes

Calculation methodologies

Aggregate Price Index (Price-weighted Index or Carli type)

Geometric (or Jevons type) Index

Market Capitalisation Index

Laspeyres Index

Paasche Index

Marshall – Edgeworth Index

Fisher Index

Equal weighted Indexes

Fundamental Indexes

Optimised Indexes (efficient or minimum variance indexes)

Fixed Income Indexes

Index Providers

Choice of Index Provider

Benchmark Regulation

Choice of Index

Currency Effects in Benchmark

Hedged Indexes

Customised Indexes

Capped Indexes

Peer Groups and Universes

Percentile Rank

Random Portfolios

Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs)

Target Returns

Blended Benchmarks (or balanced benchmarks)

Fixed Weight & Dynamised Benchmarks

Spliced Indexes

Money-weighted Benchmarks (or public market equivalents)

Normal Portfolio

Benchmark Statistics

Index Turnover

Up-capture Indicator

Down-capture Indicator

Up-number Ratio

Down-number Ratio

Up-percentage Ratio

Down-percentage Ratio

Percentage Gain Ratio

Excess return

Arithmetic Excess Return

Geometric Excess Return

Chapter 5 Risk

Definition of Risk

Risk types

Risk management v Risk control

Risk aversion

Ex-post and ex-ante

Descriptive Statistics

Mean (or arithmetic mean)

Mean absolute deviation (or mean deviation)

Variance

Bessel’s correction (population or sample, n or n-1)

Sample variance

Standard deviation (variability or volatility)

Annualised risk (or time aggregation)

The Central Limit Theorem

Frequency and number of data points

Normal (or Gaussian) distribution

Histograms

Skewness (Fisher’s or moment skewness)

Sample skewness

Kurtosis (Pearson’s kurtosis)

Excess kurtosis (or Fisher’s kurtosis)

Sample kurtosis

Bera-Jarque statistic (or Jarque-Bera)

Covariance

Sample covariance

Correlation (r)

Sample correlation

Performance appraisal

Sharpe ratio (reward to variability, Sharpe index)

Roy ratio

Risk-free rate

Alternative Sharpe ratio

Revised Sharpe ratio

Adjusted Sharpe Ratio

Skew-adjusted Sharpe Ratio

Relative risk

Tracking error (or tracking risk, relative risk, active risk)

Information ratio

Geometric information ratio

Modified information ratio

Regression analysis

Regression equation

Regression alpha

Regression beta

Regression epsilon

Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM)

Beta (b) (systematic risk or volatility)

Jensen’s alpha (Jensen’s measure or Jensen’s differential return or ex-post alpha)

Annualised alpha

Bull beta (b+)

Bear beta (b-)

Beta timing ratio

Market timing

Systematic risk

Correlation

R2(or coefficient of determination)

Specific (or residual) risk

Treynor ratio (Reward to volatility)

Appraisal ratio (or Treynor-Black ratio)

Factor Models

Fama decomposition

Selectivity

Diversification

Net selectivity

Fama-French three factor model

Three factor alpha (or Fama-French alpha)

Carhart four factor model

Four factor alpha (or Carhart’s alpha)

Multi-factor Models

Drawdown

Average drawdown

Maximum drawdown

Largest individual drawdown

Recovery time (or drawdown duration)

Drawdown deviation

Ulcer index

Pain index

Calmar ratio (or Drawdown ratio)

MAR ratio

Sterling ratio

Sterling-Calmar ratio

Burke ratio

Modified Burke ratio

Martin ratio (or Ulcer performance index)

Pain ratio

Partial Moments

Downside risk (or semi-standard deviation)

Downside potential

Pure downside risk

Half variance (or semi-variance)

Upside risk (or upside uncertainty)

Mean absolute moment

Omega ratio (W)

Bernardo & Ledoit (or gain–loss) ratio

d ratio

Omega-Sharpe ratio

Sortino ratio

Reward to half-variance

Downside risk Sharpe ratio

Sortino-Satchell ratio

Kappa ratio

Upside potential ratio

Volatility skewness

Variability skewness

Farinelli-Tibiletti Ratio

Prospect ratio

Fixed Income Risk

Pricing fixed income instruments

Redemption yield (yield to maturity)

Weighted average cash flow

Duration (effective mean term, discounted mean term or volatility)

Macaulay duration

Macaulay-Weil duration

Modified duration

Portfolio duration

Effective duration (or option-adjusted duration)

Duration to worst

Convexity

Modified convexity

Effective convexity

Portfolio convexity

Bond returns

Duration beta

Reward to duration

Miscellaneous Risk Measures

Hurst index (or Hurst exponent)

Bias ratio

Active Share

Value at Risk (VaR)

Risk-adjusted return

M2

M2 excess return

Differential return

Adjusted M2

Skew-adjusted M2

Types of Excess Return (or Alpha)

A Periodic Table of Risk Measures

Periodic Table Design

Why measure ex-post risk?

Which risk measures to use?

Hedge funds

Smoothing

Outliers

Data mining

Time Period

Chapter 6 Return Attribution 280

What is Attribution?

Definition

Attribution as an asset management tool

Early Development

Types of Return Attribution

Returns-based (regression or factor) Attribution

Holdings-based (or buy/hold) Attribution

Transaction-based Attribution

Arithmetic Attribution

Brinson, Hood & Beebower

Asset Allocation

Security (or Stock) Selection

Interaction

Brinson & Fachler

Interaction

Geometric Excess Return Attribution

Asset allocation

Stock selection

Sector Weights

Frequency of Analysis

Security Level Attribution

Transaction costs

Off-benchmark (or zero weight sector) attribution

Attribution consistent with the Investment Decision Process

Market Neutral Attribution

Attribution for 130/30 funds (or extended short funds)

Leverage (or gearing)

Attribution including derivatives

Attribution including Equity Index Futures

Attribution Analysis using options

Multi-currency attribution

Ankrim & Hensel

Karnosky & Singer

Geometric Multi-Currency Attribution

Naïve Currency Attribution

Compounding effects

Geometric Currency Allocation

Currency Timing

Interest Rate Differentials

Revised Currency Allocation

Revised Country Allocation

Incorporating Forward Currency Contracts

Summarising

Other Currency Issues

Fixed Income Attribution

The Yield Curve

Yield curve analysis

Shift

Twist (or slope)

Curvature (or butterfly)

Carry

Credit (or spread)

Yield Curve Decomposition

Wagner & Tito

Weighted Duration Attribution

Geometric Fixed Income Attribution

Campisi Framework

Yield Curve Decomposition

Multi-period attribution

Smoothing Algorithms

Carino

Menchero

Linking Algorithms

GRAP Method

Frongello

Davies & Laker

Multi-period Geometric Attribution

Annualisation of Excess Return

Attribution Annualisation

Contribution Analysis (or absolute return attribution)

Risk-adjusted Attribution

Selectivity

Multi-level Attribution

Balanced attribution

Evolution of performance attribution methodologies

Chapter 7 Performance Presentation Standards

Why do we need performance presentation standards?

Global Investment Performance Standards (GIPS®) – A history

Advantages for Asset Managers

The GIPS Standards

Fundamentals of Compliance

Definition of the Firm

Maintaining Policies and Procedures

Providing GIPS Reports

Benchmark Selection

Correcting Errors in GIPS Reports

Composite Descriptions

Recordkeeping

Linking of theoretical and actual performance

Portability

Use of time-weighted or money-weighted returns

Claiming Compliance with the GIPS standards.

Input Data and Calculation Methodology

Firm Assets, Composite Assets and Pooled Fund Assets

Overlay Exposure

Returns

Valuation

Time-Weighted Returns

Money-weighted Returns

Net Returns

Composite Returns

Private Market Investments

Real Estate

Net-of-fee Carve-outs returns

Wrap fee, side pockets and subscription lines of credit

Composite and Pooled Fund Maintenance

Composite Maintenance

Carve-Outs

Presentation and Reporting

Composite Time-weighted Return Report

Returns, Dispersion & Risk

Unobservable inputs, gross or net-of-fees, multiple benchmarks, breaks in performance, carve-outs and non-fee-paying portfolios

Committed Capital and Advisory Assets

Reporting currency, carve-outs, overlay strategies, wrap fees and supplemental information

Composite Money-weighted Reports

Composite Cumulative Committed Capital

Total Value to Since-inception Paid in Capital (TVPI or Multiple of Investment Capital (MOIC) or Investment Multiple)

Since-inception Distributions to Since-inception Paid-in Capital (Realisation multiple or DPI)

Since-inception Paid-in Capital to cumulative Committed Capital (PIC Multiple)

Residual Value to since-Inception Paid-in Capital (Unrealised Multiple or RVPI)

Disclosures

Claim of Compliance

Firm, composite and benchmark definitions

Fee disclosures

Inception date, creation date, composite lists availability of policies and procedures, leverage and estimated transaction costs.

Significant events, redefinition, minimum asset levels and withholding tax

Conflicts with regulation, carve-out disclosures & sub-advisors.

Benchmark Disclosures

Significant cash flow disclosure and material errors.

Risk measures, overlay strategy, real estate valuation and theoretical performance disclosures.

Sample GIPS Composite Report

GIPS Advertising Guidelines

Fundamental requirements of the GIPS Advertising Guidelines

GIPS Advertisements that do not include performance.

GIPS advertisements for composites

GIPS Advertisements for a Broad Distribution Pooled Fund

Verification

Performance Examination

Achieving Compliance

Maintaining Compliance

GIPS Standards for Asset Owners

Chapter 8 Bringing it all together

Effective dashboards

Data visualisation tools

Manager Selection

Asset Manager Selection

Manager Evaluation

Portfolio Evaluation

Monitoring and Control

The Four Dimensions of Performance

Ex-post Return (The traditional dimension)

Ex-post Risk (The neglected dimension)

Ex-ante Return (The unknown dimension)

Ex-ante Risk (The “sexy” dimension)

Risk efficiency ratio

Performance efficiency

Risk control structure

Risk management

Glossary of Key Terms

Appendix A - Simple Attribution

Appendix B - Multi-Currency Attribution Methodology

Bibliography

Index

"Performance measurement and attribution are key tools in informing investment decisions and strategies. Performance measurement is the quality control of the investment decision process, enabling money managers to calculate return, understand the behavior of a portfolio of assets, communicate with clients and determine how performance can be improved. The process of adding value via benchmarking, asset allocation, security analysis, portfolio construction, and executing transactions is collectively described as the investment decision process. There are many stakeholders in the investment decision process; this book focuses on the investors or owners of capital and the firms managing their assets (asset managers or individual portfolio managers)"-- Provided by publisher.

About the Author
CARL R. BACON, CIPM, is Chief Advisor to Confluence. He is a member of the Advisory Board of the Journal of Performance Measurement and Founder of The Freedom Index Company. He is the former Chairman of StatPro plc, Director of Risk Control and Performance at Foreign & Colonial Management Ltd and Vice President Head of Performance (Europe) for JP Morgan Investment Management Inc.

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