Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
1
Performance Calculations 101
Monday, October 19, 2009 Public Pension Financial Forum John D. Simpson, CIPM The Spaulding Group, Inc.
2
What we’ll do today We’ll cover a few basic formulas that are used to calculate rates of return and risk “Nature is pleased with simplicity” Issac Newton, Principia We will try to make this easy to comprehend But, we have a fair amount to cover and limited time Feel free to ask questions
3
Rates of Return: Time-weighting vs. Money-weighting
Time-weighted returns measure the performance of the portfolio manager Money-weighted returns measure the performance of the fund or portfolio
4
Time-weighting Time-weighting eliminates or reduces the impact of cash flows Because managers don’t control the flows Two general approaches: Approximations, which approximate the exact, true, time-weighted rate of return Exact, true, time-weighted rate of return
5
Approximation methods we’ll discuss
Original Dietz Modified Dietz Modified BAI (a.k.a. Modified IRR and Linked IRR)
6
What Are Cash Flows? Two types: Specifics:
External: impact the portfolio Internal: impact securities, sectors Specifics: External: contributions/withdrawals of cash and/or securities Internal: buys/sells, interest/dividends, corporate actions
7
Visualizing Flows
8
The scenario we will use to demonstrate the various formulas:
9
Original Dietz Assumes constant rate of return on the portfolio during the period Very easy method to calculate Provides approximation to the true rate of return Returns can be distorted when large flows occur Also, return doesn’t take into account market volatility, which further affects the accuracy Weights each cash flow as if it occurred at the middle of the time period
10
Original Dietz
11
Modified Dietz Method Assumes constant rate of return on the portfolio during the period Provides an improvement in the approximation of true time-weighted rate of return, versus the Original Dietz formula Disadvantage greatest when: (a) 1 or more large external cash flows; (b) cash flows occur during periods of high market volatility Weights each external cash flow by the amount of time it is held in the portfolio
12
Modified Dietz Method
13
Modified Dietz Method
14
Modified BAI (Modified IRR, Linked IRR)
Determines internal rate of return for the period Takes into account the exact timing of each external cash flow Market value at beginning of period is treated as cash flow Disadvantage: Requires iterative process solution – difficult to calculate manually
15
Modified BAI Method
16
Modified BAI Method
17
True, exact TWRR Value portfolio every time external flows occur
Advantage: calculates true time-weighted rate of return Disadvantage: requires precise valuation of the portfolio on each day of external cash flow
18
True, exact TWRR
19
Money-weighted returns Internal Rate of Return (IRR)
Takes cash flows into consideration Cash flows will impact the return Only uses cash flows and the closing market value in calculation (don’t revalue during period) Produces the return that equates the present value of all invested capital
20
Solving for the IRR It’s an iterative process
We solve for r, by trial-and error The general rule is to use the Modified Dietz return as the “first order approximation” to the IRR
21
IRR Method
22
IRR Method
23
Calculation Question Why did the Modified BAI and IRR yield the same returns (2.63%)? ANSWER: Because both the Modified BAI and IRR use the same formula: the IRR. The difference is that with Modified BAI, we calculate the return for subperiods (e.g., months) and then geometrically link them; however, for the IRR, we do not link subperiod returns … we calculate the IRR across the entire period (e.g., if we were calculating a return for a year, we’d geometrically link the 12 monthly Modified BAI returns but we’d only calculate a single IRR, valuing the portfolio only at the start and the end of the year!
24
Contrasting IRR with time-weighting
IRR values portfolio at the beginning and end of the period TWRR values at various times throughout the period
25
We’ll use an example to compare TWRR and MWRR
Our investment is a mutual fund Where two investors begin with 100 shares And both make two additional purchases during the year of 100 shares each But at different times And at different prices
26
Our fund’s end-of-month NAVs
27
Our investors’ purchases
Believes Buy high/ Sell low Believes Buy low/ Sell high
28
The investments’ unrealized gains/losses
Paper gain of $600! Paper loss of $600!
29
What’s our return? The fund’s return (using an exact TWRR method):
30
How about our investors?
But this investor lost $600 And this investor made $600 Because time weighting eliminates the effect of cash flows!
31
How about money-weighting?
Investor #1’s IRR = % Investor #2’s IRR = %
32
As a Plan Sponsor … Which returns make more sense to you?
Which are more meaningful? TWRR judges portfolio manager MWRR judges the portfolio
33
Multi-period rates of return
We don’t just want to report returns for a month We want to link our returns to form quarterly, annual, since inception, etc. returns How do we do this?
34
Geometric linking The process used to link sub-period returns to create returns for extended periods: e.g., We want to take January, February, and March returns to create a return for 1Q We geometrically link in order to compound our returns
35
Geometric linking Step-by-step process:
Convert the returns to a decimal Add 1 Multiply these numbers Subtract 1 Convert the number to a percent
36
Geometric linking
37
Before we move to risk, are there any questions?
38
Risk measures Two categories Formulas that measure risk
We’ll look at standard deviation and tracking error Formulas that adjust the return per unit of risk We’ll look at Sharpe Ratio and Information Ratio
39
Standard Deviation Measures volatility of returns over time
The most common and most criticized measure to describe the risk of a security or portfolio. Used not only in finance, but also statistics, sciences, and social sciences. Provides a precise measure of the amount of variation in any group of numbers.
40
Standard Deviation; based on the Bell-shaped (normal) curve
41
Standard Deviation Formulas
Note: This is represented in Excel as the STDEVP Function Note: This is represented in Excel as the STDEV Function
42
An example of standard deviation
43
Tracking Error The difference between the performance of the benchmark and the replicating portfolio Measures active risk; the risk the manager took relative to the benchmark Measured as annualized standard deviation Standard deviation of excess returns Standard deviation of the difference in historical returns of a portfolio and its benchmark
44
Tracking Formula: Volatility of Past Returns vs. Benchmark
Tracking error measures how closely the portfolio follows the index and is measured as the standard deviation of the difference between the portfolio and index returns.
45
An example of Tracking Error
To annualize, multiply by square root of 12
46
The Sharpe Ratio Also known as Reward-to-Variability Ratio
Developed by Bill Sharpe – Nobel Prize Winner Equity Risk Premium (Return) / Standard Deviation (Risk)
47
Sharpe Ratio Formula Equity Risk Premium divided by standard deviation of portfolio returns
48
An example of Sharpe Ratio
To annualize, multiply by square root of 12
49
Information Ratio The Information Ratio measures the excess return of an investment manager divided by the amount of risk the manager takes relative to the benchmark It’s the Excess Return (Active Return) divided by the Tracking Error (Active Risk) IR is a variation of the Sharpe Ratio, where the Return is the Excess Return and the Risk is the Excess or Active Risk
50
Information Ratio IR serves as a measure of the “special information” an active portfolio manager has Value Added (excess return) / Tracking Error Typically annualize
51
Information Ratio Active Return on the account Account’s Active Risk
52
An example of Information Ratio
53
What have we covered today
Hopefully you’ll agree a lot in a short time Return measures TWRR approximation measues Original Dietz Modified Dietz Modified BAI TWRR exact measure True daily Geometric Linking
54
What have we covered today
Risk measures Measurements of risk Standard deviation Tracking error Measurements of risk-adjusted returns Sharpe ratio Information ratio
55
Questions? John D. Simpson jsimpson@spauldinggrp.com 1.310.500.9640
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.