Frame
the investment process for a person of your age group.
The Investment Process
It is rare to find investors
investing their entire savings in a single security. Instead, they tend to
invest in a group of securities. Such a group of securities is called a portfolio. Most financial experts
stress that in order to minimize risk; an investor should hold a
well-balanced investment portfolio. The investment process describes how an
investor must go about making decisions with regard to what securities to invest
in while constructing a portfolio, how extensive the investment should be,
and when the investment should be made. This is a procedure involving the
following five steps:
1. Setting Investment Policy
This initial step determines the investor’s
objectives and the amount of his investable wealth. Since there
is a positive relationship between risk and return, the investment objectives
should be stated in terms of both risk and return.
This step concludes with the asset
allocation decision: identification of the potential categories of
financial assets for consideration in the portfolio that the investor is
going to construct. Asset allocation involves dividing an investment
portfolio among different asset categories, such as stocks, bonds and cash.
The asset allocation that works best for an
investor at any given point in his life depends largely on his time horizon
and his ability to tolerate risk.
Time Horizon – The time
horizon is the expected number of months, years, or decades that an investor
will be investing his money to achieve a particular financial goal. An
investor with a longer time horizon may feel more comfortable with a riskier
or more volatile investment because he can ride out the slow economic cycles
and the inevitable ups and downs of the markets. By contrast, an investor who
is saving for his teen-aged daughter’s college education would be less likely
to take a large risk because he has a shorter time horizon.
Risk Tolerance – Risk
tolerance is an investor’s ability and willingness to lose some or all of his
original investment in exchange for greater potential returns. An aggressive
investor, or one with a high-risk tolerance, is more likely to risk losing
money in order to get better results. A conservative investor, or one with a
low-risk tolerance, tends to favour investments that will preserve his or her
original investment. The conservative investors keep a "bird in the
hand," while aggressive investors seek "two in the bush."
While setting the investment policy, the
investor also selects the portfolio management style (active
vs. passive management).
Active Management is the process
of managing investment portfolios by attempting to time the market and/or
select ‘undervalued’ stocks to buy and ‘overvalued’ stocks to sell, based
upon research, investigation and analysis.
Passive Management is the process
of managing investment portfolios by trying to match the performance of an
index (such as a stock market index) or asset class of securities as closely
as possible, by holding all or a representative sample of the securities in
the index or asset class. This portfolio management style does not use market
timing or stock selection strategies.
2. Performing Security Analysis
This step is the security selection decision:
Within each asset type, identified in the asset allocation decision, how does
an investor select which securities to purchase. Security analysis involves
examining a number of individual securities within the broad categories of
financial assets identified in the previous step. One purpose of this
exercise is to identify those securities that currently appear to be
mispriced. Security analysis is done either using Fundamental or Technical
analysis (both have been discussed in subsequent units).
Fundamental analysis is a method
used to evaluate the worth of a security by studying the financial data of
the issuer. It scrutinizes the issuer’s income and expenses, assets and
liabilities, management, and position in its industry. In other words, it
focuses on the ‘basics’ of the business.
Technical analysis is a method
used to evaluate the worth of a security by studying market statistics.
Unlike fundamental analysis, technical analysis disregards an issuer’s
financial statements. Instead, it relies upon market trends to ascertain
investor sentiment to predict how a security will perform.
3. Portfolio Construction
This step identifies those specific assets
in which to invest, as well as determining the proportion of the investor’s
wealth to put into each one. Hereselectivity, timing and diversification issues
are addressed. Selectivity refers to security analysis and
focuses on price movements of individual securities. Timing involves
forecasting of price movement of stocks relative to price movements of fixed
income securities (such as bonds).Diversification aims at
constructing a portfolio in such a way that the investor’s risk is minimized.
The following table summarizes how the
portfolio is constructed for an active and a passive investor.
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Asset Allocation
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Security Selection
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Active investor
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Market timing
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Stock picking
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Passive investor
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Maintain pre-determined selections
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Try to track a well-known market index
like Nifty, Sensex
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4. Portfolio Revision
This step is the repetition of the three
previous steps, as objectives might change and previously held portfolio
might not be the optimal one.
5. Portfolio performance evaluation
This step involves determining periodically
how the portfolio has performed over some time period (returns earned vs.
risks incurred).
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