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Financial Planning March 1, 2008 Jane Li |
What is Exotic Beta? Exotic beta is essentially a practical, no-nonsense concept that financial planners can use to benefit the portfolios of everyday investors, not just the portfolios of the ultra-wealthy. Read on for more. |
Investment Advisor December 2005 Jeff Joseph |
Hedgeworld Hedge Fund Focus: The Third Source of Returns The role of beta in hedge fund returns provides investors with new and interesting opportunities, particularly in light of the prevailing wisdom that fuels the drive toward alpha-beta separation and risk-budgeting allocation methodologies. |
Investment Advisor November 2005 Jeff Joseph |
Hedgeworld Hedge Fund Focus: The Roles of Alpha and Beta Acknowledging the elusive nature of alpha is critical to hedge fund and absolute return investors, particularly because most think of alpha as the primary (if not the exclusive) source of hedge fund returns. But this may be an erroneous assumption. |
The Motley Fool November 20, 2006 Dan Caplinger |
It's All Greek to Me Finance's unique combination of mathematical and social sciences makes the field a linguistic battleground among academics. As ways to express financial concepts, alpha and beta are relatively simple. |
Investment Advisor July 2007 Jeff Joseph |
Overlay Uses 101 Separation of alpha and beta appears to be the mantra du jour in portfolio management. Here's how overlays fit in. |
Financial Advisor March 2006 Brad Zigler |
What Price Active Management? When stock picking is distilled from within a mutual fund, the true cost of active management bubbles to the surface. |
On Wall Street October 1, 2008 Tim Knepp |
Question Assumptions It's time to ask ourselves whether the blunt tools of broad asset class definitions and traditional asset allocations provide an adequate defense against the complex risk and interaction of today's markets. |
Financial Planning July 1, 2010 Craig L. Israelsen |
Alpha and Beta Can a portfolio consisting entirely of beta-producing elements produce alpha? The answer is clearly yes. |
Real Estate Portfolio May/Jun 2008 Ryan Chittum |
From Alpha to Beta Sophisticated concepts of hedging alpha risk with beta, long familiar in the hedge fund world, are largely absent from real estate investing. |
Financial Planning February 1, 2007 David E. Adler |
High Net Worth: Alpha-Beta Investing This institutional strategy is starting to make inroads among high-net-worth managers. |
Wall Street & Technology May 15, 2006 Larry Tabb |
Strolling With My Alpha How does portable alpha impact the investment management business? This strategy turns portfolio managers into asset allocators. Instead of picking stocks, or companies, they pick inexpensive indices and choose expensive hedge funds. |
Investment Advisor September 2008 |
21st Century Asset Allocation Over the past several years, institutional investors increasingly have opted to allocate a portion of their portfolios to alternative investments as a way to smooth out market volatility. This trend is now spreading to the retail marketplace. |
Financial Planning February 1, 2006 Joan Warner |
The Case For Portable ALPHA As international markets become more correlated, the need for financial advisers and money managers to access greater diversification -- while hedging risk -- could make this strategy investing's next hot model. |
Investment Advisor May 2006 Joseph & Kurdas |
Hedgeworld Hedge Fund Focus: The Search for Portable Returns With the portable approach, the search for top-performing managers as a source of alpha is separate from the desire to get market return on an asset class, the beta. |
Financial Planning December 1, 2005 Marshall Eckblad |
Hedge Funds Behind the Curtain New research shows the theoretical underpinning of a potential future line of mutual funds that will offer various hedge fund strategies to average investors. |
Investment Advisor August 2008 Melanie Waddell |
Time for an Alternative The volatile market is sparking more use of alternative assets |
Registered Rep. May 16, 2011 Brad Zigler |
Paying Too Much For Alpha? A "two-and-twenty" arrangement -- two percent annual management fee and 20 percent of new profits -- is commonly charged by the hedgies. Pretty expensive stuff, that alpha. |
Investment Advisor October 2005 Joseph & Kurdas |
Hedgeworld Hedge Fund Focus: Portable Alpha Investing Institutions seeking better risk-adjusted returns are increasingly employing a portable alpha approach, in some cases using this method to invest with multistrategy hedge fund managers through funds of funds. |
Financial Advisor March 2010 Alan Lavine |
Markowitz: MPT Holds Up Modern portfolio theory never claimed diversification would help during financial crises. |
Financial Advisor September 2010 Paul R. Sanford |
You Are Not Yale Yale's David F. Swensen held the unofficial title of investment genius for many years until his model nose-dived with everyone else's in the 2008 crash. |
Financial Planning December 1, 2008 Suzanne McGee |
The Perfect Alternative Is there an asset class for your clients portfolios whose price moves in the opposite direction to that of mainstream investments like stocks and bonds? |
Financial Advisor April 2007 Matthew M. Brandeburg |
Alpha: Charge Clients Based On The Value You Add As financial advisors, we need to quantify what our investment planning acumen is achieving for our clients. |
The Motley Fool July 30, 2007 John Rosevear |
When Twice as Much Isn't Twice as Good The goal of asset allocation is to spread your investments among different classes of assets to achieve better overall performance with less volatility. How can you tell if your funds are really diversified? |
Registered Rep. February 1, 2006 Brad Zigler |
Getting What You Pay For A risk consultant and finance professor has concluded that hedge funds are actually cheaper than has commonly been supposed and that mutual funds are more expensive than most have believed. |
Financial Planning April 1, 2011 Suzanne McGee |
Chasing Alpha With investment strategists and pundits predicting a long period of sluggish returns that may not make it out of the single digits, there is every reason for advisors to intensify their quest for alpha. But alpha is both hard to define and harder to find. |
Financial Advisor April 2010 Jeff Schlegel |
An Alternative World A growing number of financial advisors and their clients are clamoring for alternative investments in the wake of the massive market maelstrom of '08-'09, but it's a broad space requiring lots of due diligence. |
Registered Rep. August 30, 2013 Bob Rice |
The Alternative Answer The most exciting, and rapidly developing, branch of liquid alternatives is the "smart beta" category, which provides easy, low-cost access to traditional hedge fund strategies. |
Financial Planning December 1, 2006 Len Reinhart |
Retirement Hedges To meet your clients' needs, your process will have to include planning for each stage of their retirement years. If used correctly, alternative investments can reduce risk in lifetime investment plans. |
Financial Planning December 1, 2010 Suzanne McGee |
Other Alternatives Advisors will need to devote more time to scrutinizing the ever-growing number of new products. And with each debut, they'll have to go back to the drawing board and decide whether the product makes the grade. |
Financial Planning December 1, 2006 Elizabeth O'Brien |
White Paper While the asset management industry remains highly profitable overall, five key challenges are putting pressure on firms. |
Financial Advisor October 2011 Carty & Carty |
Retirement Survival A balance-sheet approach for necessities and life goals has many advantages for clients. |
Financial Planning August 1, 2006 John Nersesian |
The Right Stuff Here's how to use performance metrics to select and evaluate fund managers for your financial advisory clients. |
The Motley Fool May 4, 2007 Zoe Van Schyndel |
Trade Like a Hedge Fund Although this strategy is often used by hedge funds and applied to equities, you can also build your own 130/30 portfolio using ETFs. |
Registered Rep. January 1, 2003 Jason Van Steenwyk |
Winning the "Loser's Game" Investing is an activity in which the victor often prevails because he makes fewer mistakes than his rival does. It is no different for financial advisors and your clients. |
Financial Planning August 1, 2006 Craig L. Israelsen |
Alpha in the Box The search for Shangri-La pales in comparison to the quest for funds that consistently deliver high alpha. The fundamental question for financial advisors: Does alpha differ across the nine Morningstar style boxes? |
The Motley Fool October 31, 2008 Karl Thiel |
Want the Highest Growth? One way investors try to identify opportunities is by chasing beta, the measure of an asset's volatility against a broader index. The basic idea is to buy high-beta stocks when you expect the market to start rising. |
Financial Advisor March 2011 James Picerno |
Strength In Numbers Indexing is moving past the standard beta carve-ups, such as small- vs. large-cap equities and value vs. growth stocks. A new era of factor-based indexing is dawning, and it promises to be far more nuanced and complicated. |
Financial Planning November 1, 2006 Craig L. Israelsen |
Alpha Goes Abroad Excess returns turn up in overseas large-cap value funds. |
On Wall Street November 1, 2008 Tim Knepp |
Handle with Care Successful manager-picking, like stock-picking, often seems random during bouts of underperformance. |
Financial Advisor November 2007 Brad Zigler |
The Long And Short Of It Only time will tell if short-enabled mutual funds live up to the expectations of their creators or are, as some critics contend, a mistake in the making. |
Registered Rep. October 1, 2012 Brad Zigler |
Beta Is Not a Bad Word Adjusting a portfolio's beta creates value -- either positive or negative -- on top of any produced by the managers' stock-picking skills. |
Investment Advisor April 2006 Kathleen M. McBride |
Anything but Middling Munder's Mid-Cap Core Growth Fund's Tony Dong has prospered by finding growth wherever. |
Financial Advisor June 2004 Eric L. Reiner |
Past Results Really May Indicate Future Returns Professors successfully apply statistical technique to picking mutual funds. |
The Motley Fool November 11, 2005 Jim Mueller |
Beta: The Alpha and Omega to Risk Analysis? To many people, beta is the be-all and end-all of risk analysis. Here, the author explores how beta is determined and then discusses its limitations and what else you should consider when looking at a company for investment. |
Wall Street & Technology October 24, 2007 Larry Tabb |
Larry Tabb Predicts Financial Trends for 2008 Financial industry trends that will become more significant throughout the coming year. |
Financial Planning September 1, 2006 Craig L. Israelsen |
Alpha Up and Down If you select mutual funds on the basis of their alpha, you may want to check how consistent those alphas really are. |
InternetNews June 23, 2010 |
Core Tapping Virtualization to Manage Security Core Security debuts beta version of Core Insight Enterprise platform, offering firms an automated testbed for monitoring and managing security threats. |
Financial Advisor March 2008 Sydney LeBlanc |
Investment Utopia With index investing used as a foundation, numerous strategies are being employed to help generate returns that may beat the market while keeping costs low and allowing investors to sleep at night. |
Registered Rep. March 5, 2014 Brad Zigler |
The Perils of Market Neutral Funds Market neutral strategies could prove more alluring now that the love affair with beta has waffled, but investors and their advisors need to be aware of potential pitfalls. |
The Motley Fool September 25, 2010 Sean Williams |
How Volatility Can Be Your Friend There is a way to use a stock's volatility to your advantage and potentially increase your profit potential. |