All IPE articles in April 2005 (Magazine)

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  • Features

    Super returns for whom?

    April 2005 (Magazine)

  • Features

    Reclaiming what is yours

    April 2005 (Magazine)

    Are brokerage commissions on securities transactions too high? Pension fund managers in Europe, who believe they are paying too much for transactions, are now more aware that there is something they can do about it. Setting up a commission recapture programme can rebate considerable sums in commission paid. Russell Investment ...

  • Features

    Stalemate in Prague

    April 2005 (Magazine)

    The works of Czech 20th century literary giants Franz Kafka, Good Soldier Svejk author Jaroslav Hasek and Vaclav Havel come to mind as one watches the country grapple with the question of pension reform. While the Czech Republic emerged from its kafkaesque period with the fall of the Berlin Wall ...

  • Features

    Plain speaking required

    April 2005 (Magazine)

  • Features

    Spending risk in the right places

    April 2005 (Magazine)

    Most pension funds currently use a two-stage process in determining investment strategy. First, they determine their strategic asset allocation (SAA) using asset liability modelling based on the unique liability characteristics of the fund. This creates the allocation to various asset classes known as the policy benchmark. Managers are then appointed ...

  • Features

    Number one priority

    April 2005 (Magazine)

    Vladimir Spidla, the EU’s social affairs commissioner, is optimistic when he thinks ahead to tackling Europe’s looming pension crisis. As former minister of labour and social affairs in the Czech Republic, and subsequently the country’s premier, he has considerable experience of state pension reform – and he refuses to see ...

  • Features

    Turning to private markets

    April 2005 (Magazine)

    The expectation of continuing low returns over the next decade has left investors scrambling for new approaches to asset allocation, desiring to move beyond the horizons of modern portfolio theory and on to the postmodern universe. One stab at defining a postmodern portfolio theory is presented in a recent report ...

  • Features

    Only one strategy makes it

    April 2005 (Magazine)

    As can be seen from table 1, all hedge fund strategies fell short of their long-term average performance in January. Three out of five strategies even posted negative returns. These poor results, which are in sharp contrast to the good performance of Q4 2004, were mainly due to an unfavourable ...

  • Features

    Wealth market lure

    April 2005 (Magazine)

    One of the fastest growing and most profitable segments within financial services, the wealth management marketplace is also highly competitive and fragmented, with independent research showing that no single provider holds more than 2% of the wealth market. Indeed, the top 20 providers globally represent only 12% of financial assets ...

  • Features

    Where the long-run returns lie

    April 2005 (Magazine)

    Markets are volatile, with much variation in year-to-year returns: we need long time series to make inferences. The periods we examine must be long enough to incorporate the good, the bad and the indifferent times. In this article we provide an update on long-run returns on stocks, bonds, bills, and ...

  • Features

    Lego: piecing it together

    April 2005 (Magazine)

    When the founder of the Lego company, Ole Kirk Christiansen, came up with the brand name, he was apparently unaware that it means ‘I put together’ in Latin. It is appropriate in this context as that is exactly what the company, based in Billund, Denmark, has been doing recently with ...

  • Features

    The search for the holy grail

    April 2005 (Magazine)

    The Capital Asset Pricing Model of financial theory is the root of the Alpha, Beta distinction. This model is shown below: where R is the return from respectively the portfolio and market, alpha and beta the objects of interest and epsilon a residual error term. This is a simple linear ...

  • Features

    Sorting the sheep from the goats

    April 2005 (Magazine)

    The Gothenburg-based Andra AP-fonden (AP2), one of the national ‘buffer’ funds of Sweden’s pension system, took the unusual step last year of terminating 16 of its domestic and European equity mandates at one stroke. This bold move was part of a strategic decision to draw a clearer distinction between the ...

  • Features

    Still waiting for the future

    April 2005 (Magazine)

    By far the most important development in the Belgian pensions market has been the provisions for industry-wide pension schemes set out in the Vandenbroucke Law which came into effect at the beginning of last year. The main aim of the law – to boost second-pillar pension provision by creating industry-wide ...

  • Features

    Shaping tomorrow's hedge funds

    April 2005 (Magazine)

    The writer Mark Twain memorably pronounced that reports of his death were greatly exaggerated. Today he could be suggesting a similar sentiment about hedge funds. Overall trends suggest hedge funds are here to stay. Consider that the average hedge fund had its 17th consecutive positive year in 2004, showing a ...

  • Features

    Managers: focus on return

    April 2005 (Magazine)

    Last year US pension funds’ median return was 11.7% for corporate and 12.5% for public funds, according to Russell Mellon universes performance data – a good result. But it is the legacy of the past five years that has done the damage, with annual returns averaging just 3.6% for corporate ...

  • Features

    Sophisticated Finns reap returns

    April 2005 (Magazine)

    In investment terms, Finland forms part of the Nordic region. As such, therefore, it is one of the most sophisticated European countries in relation to the private equity market.Finland invested 0.307% of its GDP in private equity in 2003, the last year for which figures are available from the European ...