West Sussex, England: John Wiley & Sons, 2003. — 284 p. — ISBN: 978-0-470-85874-5.
For many years asset management was considered to be a marginal activity, but today, it is central to the development of financial industry throughout the world. Asset management's transition from an "art and craft" to an industry has inevitably called integrated business models into question, favouring specialisation strategies based on cost optimisation and learning curve objectives. This book connects each of these major categories of techniques and practices to the unifying and seminal conceptual developments of modern portfolio theory.
In these bear market times, performance evaluation of portfolio managers is of central focus. This book will be one of very few on the market and is by a respected member of the profession.
Allows the professionals, whether managers or investors, to take a step back and clearly separate true innovations from mere improvements to well-known, existing techniques.
Puts into context the importance of innovations with regard to the fundamental portfolio management questions, which are the evolution of the investment management process, risk analysis and performance measurement.
Takes the explicit or implicit assumptions contained in the promoted tools into account and, by so doing, evaluate the inherent interpretative or practical limits.
Biographies.
Presentation of the Portfolio Management Environment.The different categories of assets.
Definition of portfolio management.
Organisation of portfolio management and description of the investment management process.
Performance analysis and market efficiency.
Performance analysis and the AIMR standards.
International investment: additional elements to be taken into account.
The Basic Performance Analysis Concepts.Return calculation.
Calculating relative return.
Definition of risk.
Estimation of parameters.
The Basic Elements of Modern Portfolio Theory.Principles.
The Markowitz model.
Efficient frontier calculation algorithm.
Simplified portfolio modeling methods.
The Capital Asset Pricing Model and its Application to Performance Measurement.The CAPM.
Applying the CAPM to performance measurement: single-index performance measurement indicators.
Evaluating the management strategy with the help of models derived from the CAPM: timing analysis.
Measuring the performance of internationally diversified portfolios: extensions to the CAPM.
The limitations of the CAPM.
Developments in the Field of Performance Measurement.Heteroskedastic models.
Performance measurement method using a conditional beta.
Performance analysis methods that are not dependent on the market model.
Multi-factor Models and their Application to Performance Measurement.Presentation of the multi-factor models.
Choosing the factors and estimating the model parameters.
Extending the models to the international arena.
Applying multi-factor models.
Summary and conclusion.
Evaluating the Investment Management Process and Decomposing Performance.The steps in constructing a portfolio.
Performance decomposition and analysis.
Fixed Income Security Investment.
Modeling yield curves: the term structure of interest rates.
Managing bond portfolio.
Performance analysis for fixed income security investment.