CFA Quant: Understanding Rates and Returns

INTEREST RATES AND RETURN MEASUREMENT :  

  • Interest Rates represent the time value of money and are interpreted as required rates of return, discount rates, or opportunity costs. 
  • An interest rate is composed of a real risk-free rate and premiums for default risk, liquidity risk, and maturity risk. 
  • The nominal risk-free rate (e.g., T-bills) includes an inflation premium; the real risk-free rate excludes inflation and default risk. 
  • Holding Period Return (HPR) is the percentage gain over a period, including price changes and income (like dividends). 
  • Returns over multiple periods are compounded; annualized returns standardize these over a year. 
  • The arithmetic mean is the average of returns and is an unbiased estimator of the true mean. 
  • The geometric mean reflects compounded growth and is always ≤ arithmetic mean; it’s used when measuring multi-period performance. 
  • The harmonic mean is suitable for averaging share prices from equal monetary investments over time. 
  • Order of means (for unequal values): Harmonic < Geometric < Arithmetic. 
  • Outliers can distort averages; trimmed and winsorized means are used to reduce their impact. 

TIME-WEIGHTED AND MONEY-WEIGHTED RETURNS:  

  • Money-weighted return (MWR) is equivalent to the internal rate of return (IRR) for a portfolio, accounting for all cash inflows and outflows. 
  • MWR considers deposits as inflows and withdrawals (including ending value) as outflows, requiring IRR calculation via financial calculators. 
  • Time-weighted return (TWR) measures the compound rate of growth of $1 over the evaluation period, independent of cash flow timing. 
  • TWR is calculated by dividing the period into subperiods at each cash flow, computing holding period returns (HPRs), and taking their geometric mean. 
  • In the given example, TWR (15.84%) exceeded MWR (13.86%) due to higher weighting of poorer performance in Year 2 by MWR. 
  • TWR is preferred in investment management, as it reflects the manager’s skill without being distorted by client-driven cash flows. 
  • MWR is appropriate when the portfolio manager controls the timing of cash inflows and outflows. 

COMMON MEASURES OF RETURN:  

  • Annualized Returns: Returns are often expressed annually for comparability; short- or long-period returns can be annualized using appropriate formulas. 
  • Impact of Compounding: Increasing compounding frequency raises the effective interest rate, which increases future value and decreases present value of cash flows. 
  • Continuous Compounding: Achieved via natural logarithms; continuously compounded returns are additive across time periods and based on the price relative (end value / start value). 
  • Gross vs. Net Returns
  • Gross return: Before management fees. 
  • Net return: After deducting management fees; both exclude trading costs. 
  • Tax Considerations
  • Pretax nominal return: Before taxes. 
  • After-tax nominal return: Post-tax. 
  • Different income types (dividends, interest) are taxed differently. 
  • Real Return: Adjusted for inflation; reflects change in purchasing power, calculated approximately as nominal return minus inflation. 
  • Leveraged Returns: Amplify gains/losses using borrowed funds; calculated as return on the investor’s actual cash investment, factoring in borrowing costs. 

KEY CONCEPTS:  

  • Interest Rate Concepts  
  • Interest rates reflect return requirements, discount rates, or opportunity costs. 
  • Nominal rate ≈ real risk-free rate + expected inflation. 
  • Risk premiums (default, liquidity, maturity) are added to reflect security risks. 
  • Return Measures 
  • Holding period return assesses return over time. 
  • Arithmetic mean is a simple average; geometric mean reflects compounded growth. 
  • Harmonic mean is useful for averaging prices; trimmed/winsorized means reduce outlier effects. 
  • Money-Weighted vs. Time-Weighted Return 
  • Money-weighted return is IRR based on actual cash flows. 
  • Time-weighted return measures compound growth, ideal for performance evaluation. 
  • Choice depends on who controls cash flows. 
  • Annualization  
  • Returns are often expressed annually; continuous compounding can be used. 
  • Types of Returns  
  • Gross return excludes fees; net return includes management/administration fees. 
  • Pretax and after-tax returns differ by tax effect. 
  • Real return adjusts for inflation; leveraged return reflects gains/losses relative to investor’s equity. 

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