Archive for the 'Main' Category

Total Expense Ratio (TER) specifics

Friday, November 14th, 2008

A Total Expense Ratio (TER) represents the drag on company performance caused by all 

annual operating costs (including administration, custody, audit and legal fees), not just the 

basic management fee. 

 

 In other words, the TER is the annual percentage reduction in 

investor returns that would result from operating costs if markets were to remain flat and the 

fund’s portfolio were to be held and not traded during a period. More detail on the calculation 

of the TER is outlined later in this document 

 

The TERs shown on www.theaic.co.uk have been calculated by Lipper, in association with the 

AIC, and based on the information published in the audited (annual) financial statements and 

regular reported data such as the NAVs. 

 

The TER for each company is updated on an annual 

basis following the announcement of the final results. Varying year-end reporting dates 

necessitate that to ensure the cost comparisons are both relevant and timely the TER data on 

www.theaic.co.uk is updated on a quarterly basis (January, April July and October). 

 

The European Commission published its recommendations on some contents of the 

simplified prospectus (UCITS III - document 2004/384/EC) in April 2004, which included 

guidelines for TERs. 

 

These TER guidelines are based on similar principles to the approach 

Lipper have already established. One particular change in methodology is the inclusion of 

performance fees in the TER, where the simplified prospectus requires performance fees to 

be both included in the calculation of the TER and also shown separately, whereas historically 

Lipper has published the performance fee charged as a separate field of information. 

 

Although the requirements of the simplified prospectus do not apply to investment 

companies, the AIC recognise the desire for comparability across other types of collective 

investment vehicles (e.g. open-ended funds). 

 

The TERs published on www.theaic.co.uk are 

thus based on similar principles. On www.theaic.co.uk where a company has a performance 

fee charge, two TERs are published, including and excluding the performance fee. 

 

Additional 

details are also provided regarding any reconstruction costs incurred and whether there is a 

performance fee arrangement in place. 

 

In Lipper’s opinion the NAV TER is the most directly comparable ratio to “Lipper TERs” that 

are published in other publications for other types of collective investment vehicles. As well 

as calculating a range of NAV TERs, Lipper calculates additional TERs based on the Gross 

Asset Value and on the Market Value. For any queries, please e-mail 

lipperfitzrovia@reuters.com or visit www.lipperweb.com 

 

LIPPER TER CALCULATION 

 

The formula for the calculation of Lipper TERs shown is as follows: 

 

Total Annualised Net Operating Expenses 

 

Total Expense Ratio (NAV) % = 

Average NAV of company during period 

Underpinning this calculation are two key elements: 

a) Total Annualised Net Operating Expenses 

Underlying expenses are sourced from each company’s annual audited accounts. These are 

categorised into operating expenses and non-operating expenses

However, in broad terms the operating expenses are the costs that a company would have to 

pay even in the absence of any purchases and sales of shares, and if investment markets 

remained static for the whole period. 

 

They therefore include management fees, audit fees, 

directors’ remuneration, custody charges and any administration and marketing costs, but 

exclude capital gains and losses, and costs associated with share transactions

 

If a financial reporting period is less than a full year the operating expenses are annualised 

(multiplied by 365 and divided by the number of days in the period). 

 

b) Average Net Asset Value (NAV) during the period 

Wherever possible we calculate average net assets during the period using the month end net 

asset values, thereby providing an accurate estimate of the reduction in annual returns 

accounted for by a company’s operating charges. Some companies such as many venture 

capital trusts only calculate their net assets biannually. In this case, the average NAV is 

necessarily based on the average of the opening, half-year and closing values. 

It should be appreciated that the Net Asset Value is the underlying book value of the 

company’s assets. This does not correspond to the price at which investors may buy and sell 

shares in the company as this is calculated from the Market Value of the shares. The 

difference between these two valuation methods is known as the Discount or Premium. A 

Discount signifies that the Net Asset Value is higher than the Market Value and a Premium 

the reverse. Although investors cannot buy or sell their shares by reference to the NAV it is 

nevertheless an important valuation method because it indicates the investors’ net exposure 

to the market in which the company is invested. 

“Investment Company Charges” in association with the AIC 

© Lipper – updated October 2007 

 

DETAILED POLICIES REGARDING TER CALCULATIONS 

As with any preparation of statistics it is necessary to set out policies and assumptions, some 

of which require subjective judgment. These situations are outlined below for information: 

1) Annual Financial Statements 

Audited annual reports have been used for all calculations. Semi-annual reports, if available, 

contain an insufficient analysis of expenses to produce an accurate Lipper TER. 

2) Non-Operating Costs 

In several cases a companies breakdown of expenses will include items that Lipper do not 

consider to be operating expenses: these will have been excluded from the Total Operating 

Expenses figure and there will be a reconciliation difference between this and the total 

expenses shown in the financial statements. 

Company expense statements often include items that are excluded from the Lipper charging 

calculation for obvious reasons, such as dividend payments and capital items (unrealised 

losses on investments etc.) Other exclusions from calculations are as follows: 

a) Lipper excludes performance fees from the standard TER calculation and continue to 

believe that two separate figures are most relevant and useful for clients and investors. 

The following points outline in detail why a consolidated [TER + Performance Fee] figure 

on its own may well cause confusion: 

Annual operating expenses act as a drag each year on fund performance, and so if the TER 

is to be used as a guide to the ongoing drag, it is important for a single figure to exclude 

performance fees (with the latter then shown separately). In a combined figure one 

cannot see how much is a result of fund performance and how much is a result of largely 

fixed operating expenses. 

Performance fees are, by their very name, performance-related and so might not be 

payable in any given period. Nevertheless, clearly understandable information on 

performance fees – both their structure and what has been charged – is essential for the 

investment community. 

Two funds, with otherwise identical expenses, are likely to have different TERs if 

performance fees were included

 

Furthermore, the better performer could have a higher 

TER. This could also create a situation where the TER of a fund could look volatile over 

time, when, in fact, this merely reflects the fund’s performance, rather than its operating 

costs. Indeed the inclusion of performance fees in a TER could partly reflect wider market 

conditions over the accounting period. 

A TER can sometimes be lower than a fund’s total operating expenses, or even negative, if 

performance fees are included. This is explained as follows: performance fees must 

necessarily be accrued at each fund valuation point. The actual crystallisation (i.e. when it 

is fixed and recorded as a payment) of that performance fee might not happen for some 

time. Any subsequent downturn in a fund’s share price will result in reduced performance 

fee accruals at future valuation points. This could lead to a situation where, within a 

particular accounting period, there is actually a reduction in the accrued performance 

fees. 

The impact of performance fees in terms of a fund’s net assets, if the performance goals 

were achieved over an accounting period, can be expressed separately (and are expressed 

separately in Lipper research). However, the most useful and relevant performance fee 

figure for investors and others is not the performance fee that was achieved in any given 

period (in net assets), but the performance fee structure itself (together with the fund’s 

performance). 

b) bank and loan interest, because this is deemed to be an investment related capital 

expense rather than an operating expense. 

c) brokerage, which is treated as a capital item and not an operating expense by the 

majority of companies

d) currency profit/loss on the companies revenue bank account, the inclusion of which 

would either increase or decrease the genuine operating expenses figure. 

e) restructuring costs, such as expenses associated with the buy-back of shares/warrants, 

restructuring of debt, mergers and other types of restructuring which are considered to 

be capital items, are generally one-off and which would distort the Lipper TER, thus 

making comparisons between companies meaningless. 

3) Ordinary Shares and Other Share Classes 

Certain investment companies issue more than one share class to meet the needs of different 

types of investor; for example, those requiring either income or capital growth or to suit 

different risk profiles. These share classes generally have differing cost structures. 

Described below is the treatment of the main types of share class currently in issue: 

a) Preference shares and zero dividend preference shares 

No expenses are attributable to preference shares and they therefore always have a zero 

Lipper TER. 

Although preference shares often carry voting rights and are treated in the accounts as 

being shareholders funds, to all intents and purposes they are a form of long term 

financing. They are consequently treated as such in the Lipper TER calculation and are 

deducted at book value from total assets to arrive at the net assets figure attributable to 

ordinary shareholders. 

b) Split capital investment companies with income shares 

“Investment Company Charges” in association with the AIC 

© Lipper – updated October 2007 

Lipper has taken the decision not to calculate TERs for split capital investment companies 

as this could be misleading for investors. For example, the split between income and 

capital means that a TER could potentially be 0% or extraordinarily high. In addition, split 

capital investment companies TERs would not be comparable with any other company, or 

indeed any other type of collective investment vehicle. 

More specifically, the NAV in the balance sheet is not always representative of the fair NAV 

of the shares (for example Income shares may receive all of the income and yet carry a 

value in the accounts of their redemption price, which may be nominal). Unfortunately, the 

process of deciding whether or not the balance sheet value is fair is a subjective one. 

Whenever possible it is Lipper’s policy to avoid subjectivity. 

6) Convertible loan stock 

The issue of convertible loan stock (CULS) can have a material effect on the NAV of the 

ordinary shares. Where the share price has risen and the CULS may be exercised at a higher 

value than book value there is a clear liability that is not recorded in the balance sheet. To 

reflect this potentially material item the diluted NAV per share is used reflecting the NAV per 

share after the theoretical conversion of all of the CULS. 

7) Fees Charged to Capital Account 

As discussed previously, we do not include in our Lipper TER calculations capital items such 

as brokerage. The apportionment of operating expenses to capital is widespread throughout 

the investment company industry. To fairly calculate the Lipper TER in these cases we have 

“repatriated” such items for inclusion in our Lipper TER calculations

8) Short Accounting Periods 

Where companies have been launched part-way through an accounting period but the 

resulting reporting period is more than ninety days old, we have included charging structure 

data for reasons similar to those outlined in the first page of this section. 

9) Errors in Lipper TER Calculations 

With any analysis such as this, questions regarding the accuracy of the underlying data are 

inevitable. In general, notified “errors” have in fact been the result either of a different 

method of calculating net assets (such as simply using closing assets, which is inferior), or 

the result of a subjective judgment made by the questioner with which we do not ourselves 

agree. 

The majority of the remaining “errors” have been the results of a cry of “foul” from certain 

promoters, for example where it has been claimed that a high, all-encompassing figure 

termed “Other Expenses” in the financial statements has in fact included non-operating costs 

such as brokerage. While these cases are extremely infrequent, we are of the opinion that we 

can only work with the information that is provided within the financial statements, and that 

any investors conducting their own Lipper TER calculations on the basis of the companies 

report and accounts would reasonably only come to the same conclusions as ourselves. This 

often leads to greater disclosure in the accounts in future periods. 

“Investment Company Charges” in association with the AIC 

Starter SIPP from EPM

Saturday, June 7th, 2008

We recently had a chance to review the low cost SIPP options offered by one of our recommended SIPP platforms provided by European Pensions Management who are based in Salisbury, Wilts.  The starter SIPP has no set up cost and the annual fee is £75. This charge applies as long as the contributions per annum do not exceed £3,600 gross (£2,880 net) and the overall value of the pension does not exceed £15,000.  

The Starter SIPP does not usually accept transfers-in but this can be done under special conditions. Protected Rights cannot be held within the Starter SIPP.  Overall, an attractive entry-level product for a younger saver who wishes to start their SIPP early on. 

Value re-appearing; caution still justified

Tuesday, April 29th, 2008

Global equities have rallied strongly since the middle of March on, some might say, a wing and a prayer, or at least on a mini boom of central bank largesse, after the nasty declines that had taken place in erratic, stair-step fashion, since the first signs last summer that something quite fundamental had changed in the global economy and capital markets.
But a short sharp upward move is a short sharp move and not much else, and easily reversible when psychology is fragile as it still is now. Read full comment here: 29-april-investment-comment.doc

Follow the Sage

Wednesday, February 13th, 2008

We live in challenging times, and at times such as these it pays the medium to long term investor to take a step back from the market melee, and try to discern where the next opportunities may lie.

History teaches us that there are invariably multiple new investment themes and trends which emerge from a fundamental period of dislocation and doubt such as the one we are living through presently.

Analysis, schmanalysis

Right now, negative news abounds from the banks, the housing market, the service sector, on the jobs front, on corporate earnings growth. Last week-end the IMF revised downwards its forecast for worldwide growth for 2008, but you got the distinct feeling that they are as much searching for straws as they are doing hard & confident analysis of the current and future state of the world’s major economies. No one knows if the US will avoid recession, and least of all, I would suggest, the IMF. Equally, no one knows whether the much-discussed decoupling theory – that the world can grow even when the US is in recession – has much or any validity.

Pushing on a string?

Arguably the single biggest question currently is whether the very dramatic moves by the US to counter the mounting recessionary threats will have any effect. As the Fed funds rate has literally plunged through the floor, we have seen a dramatic reversal of the yield curve, the spread between the 2 year and 10 year US Treasury Bond. Observing the relationship over the last 15 years offers some clues as to where we might be in the evolution of the current recession / slowdown.

In the 90-91 recession, the curve steepened well after the recession had technically ended, whilst in the 01-02 recession most of the steepening occurred prior to the end of the recession.

Of course, no two recessions are the same, although they do tend to share some similarities. Superficially, this one seems to echo the early 90’s experience, when one of the main catalysts was a major crisis in the US Savings & Loans industry (basically building societies, US style).

The point is that, whatever the headlines, and whatever the well rehearsed & serious systemic problems that are undoubtedly part of the cause of the current crisis, sharply steepening yield curves don’t persist forever, and neither do economic downturns.

Follow the sage…

For investors then, who don’t get paid for intricate macroeconomic analysis or sitting on their hands well beyond the point of maximum opportunity, this is a classic time to be seeking out solid investment opportunities. Witness Warren Buffett, who invariably only really gets busy in such times. If it’s time for him to go to work, surely it might pay us to turn away from the endless gloomwatch, and return to old-fashioned tyre-kicking.

It’s an irony that when the big picture noise is at its loudest and most pessimistic, it is usually the time to return to bottom-up analysis of company fundamentals. The companies that are thriving in this environment, and whose share prices are giving tell-tale signs that they are more than holding their own, despite the downturn, these are the names to be adding to your wish list. Then add patience and the passage of time, and you have the ingredients of a future investment strategy, looking beyond the current gloom and despair.

Comments on this article are now open (4th March 2008).

US economic cross-winds & the Fed

Wednesday, September 26th, 2007

26-9-07 

We have long maintained that in order to analyse the investment and economic cycle, it’s vital to understand what is happening in the US as the largest economy in the world. This was common wisdom until recently, but with the emergence of the new Asian economies there is a tendency to look elsewhere. The fact remains the US economy is hugely influential, and has been a major source of growth for the export led economies around the world.
The current  data coming out of the US is not very encouraging, to say the least. The housing recession is worsening with each month, with the supply of homes for sale at the end of September at a record 4.58 million. There is genuine concern that the great American consumer may finally have met his or her match.
Yet US companies, like their counterparts across much of the globe, are in exceedingly good health, for the most part: balance sheets are awash with cash, and merger targets are likely to become more accessible, now that the private equity feeding frenzy has abated. Shares in the US are cheap on a relative basis, and unlike previous periods, the earnings are reliable and not subject to revisions. The lessons of the last decade seem to have been learned in that regard at least. It’s a pity the major lessons from the Savings & Loans crisis of the early 1990’s were forgotten: the sub-prime crisis in one way is really the S&L crisis under another guise.
So all eyes are on the consumer, and equally on the Federal Reserve Bank. The latter is almost mandated to ease rates as they attempt to grasp the complexity and extent of the sub-prime contagion. This creates a push-pull situation, with worsening consumer fundamentals offset by an increasingly likely easing of monetary conditions. And the easing may accelerate if the Fed is unable to get a good handle on the systemic risks hidden in a thousand and one hiding places. What appears to have pushed the Fed to cut by ½ % recently – a rare event – was forward data on housing data which was nothing short of shocking.
But despite the gloom on housing, it is extraordinarily hard to make a convincing bearish case if we are indeed at the start of an easing cycle. It requires an extreme bearish outlook over the next 2-3 years, which would require China and India to switch overnight from turbo-charged growth to low growth, and a whole host of other low-probability scenarios.
If the market starts to project a genuine turn in the interest rate cycle, with a series of easings over the next 6-18 months, then we will enter a new phase in the investment and economic cycle. At the moment, we are caught between the devil of the housing crisis, forcing rates down – and the deep blue sea of incipient commodity driven inflation, pushing inflationary concerns and expectations up. One factor which may also have influenced the Fed’s decision is that the drop in inflation has made money tighter than it was heading into the credit crunch, as measured by the real target rate, which is the federal funds rate adjusted for inflation. This has risen from 2.8% in January to 3.4% in July because of falling inflation.

Overall, what is a globally orientated, conservative, UK-based investor to do in this fractious and volatile environment? More of the same is the rather unexciting answer, we think. Diversify sensibly, not slavishly. Buy top notch assets, be they funds, equities or other instruments. Stay the course as the market story unfolds, for as we said it rarely pays to get too far off the optimistic course when the Fed eases. And there is always the scenario where the market hurriedly discounts what it feels the worst case, takes notes that macro and micro fundamentals are in good shape, and with the tailwind of monetary easing in its back, takes off on of those upside adventures that can leave many a cautious investor behind. In other words, this remains a two way market, as is the case in most markets.

30-08-2007: Some perspective on the 2007 market crisis

Thursday, August 30th, 2007

There are 75 million homeowners in the United States, and about 65 million have seen 100% gains in their homes from 2001 to 2005, & 40% of homeowners own their houses outright. Of the 60% of homeowners who have mortgages, 80% are prime mortgages, and 97% of those people are making their payments. Furthermore:

  1. About 14% of the 60% of mortgages in the United States are subprime or alt-A; one might assume that a lot of those will go bad.
  2. There are around $150 billion worth of mortgages at risk, so perhaps $50-75 billion of that gets foreclosed.
  3. There is a $10 trillion mortgage market to absorb that $50-75 billion. Plus, there is $18 trillion in stock market value, $30 trillion in bonds. The Internet bubble bursting wiped out $7 trillion in 18 months.
  4. 98.2% of people over 30 and college-educated are working. There has not been a reduction in consumer spending in any year since 1959. The same US consumer that continued to spend after the bursting tech bubble wiped out $7 trillion of net worth.
  5. Finally, it’s surprising to note that in the US there have been 14 months in total when the economy has been technically in recession in the past 30 years. Any one might think it’s been 14 years in total, rather than 14 months, listening to the current gloom and doom…

 No firm conclusions yet, just some perspective on what has been the centre of the typhoon which has changed the nature of the post 9/11 world, during which time nearly all boatsd have risen with the incoming tide of liquidity and accompanying diminished risk-aversion.

28-08-2007: Patience

Tuesday, August 28th, 2007

Patience

“The big money was made in the waiting”. Jesse Livermore

“You do better to make a few large bets and sit back and wait. There are huge mathematical advantages to doing nothing. ” Charles Munger

Man’s greatest invention? “Compound interest.” Albert Einstein

22-08-2007: Value & timing

Wednesday, August 22nd, 2007

Warren Buffett says he is getting more calls these days, albeit as he says, in classic Buffett-speak, ‘from a low base’

Of course, he never shows his hand until it turns up at the next SEC filing on the SEC website. So no one knows whether he thinks Countrywide Credit, or the market in general, represent good value, in his eyes.

What we know is that when shares trade near to intrinsic value, usually this is a good time to be thinking about buying. Recently, we have started to see a few of these, especially among the small cap sector.

Turning to the FTSE 100, we would say from a timing point of view…’tempting, but perhaps not quite yet’ - If you look at the current price action relative to the major fall on and around July 26th, it’s fair to conclude, we think, that ‘we’re not there yet’. A decisive timing driven allocation move into the market here would have a major element of guesswork about it. On the other hand, for long term considerations, over a 3-5+ year horizon, the ‘Buffett camp’ view (very intrigued by the sudden value appearing here, there & everywhere) probably makes a great deal of sense. To adapt one of our Nebraskan sage’s aphorismsmarkets vote in the short term, then they weigh in the long term, having forgotten who they had voted for originally.

Are you a voter, or a weigher?

08-08-2007: Global Leaders: Cisco Systems ($31.48)

Wednesday, August 8th, 2007

http://arcturus-investments.co.uk/2007/07/07/global-leaders-cisco-systems/

This was our earlier note on Cisco who today reported stellar numbers, upgraded growth forecasts and crossed the threshold for the first time in their corporate history as non router sales surpassed router sales. It’s taken 5-7 years, but Cisco are genuinely back in the driver’s seat.

The ‘three bears’ test

Tuesday, August 7th, 2007

David Roche writes in a compelling artcicle in today’s FT about the changing liquidity landscape that in his view, we are starting to see. Focus points of the article include: the stock of all global assets and related funding is estimated at 10 years of Global GDP; the ‘new monetarism’ of today’s markets driven by securitised debt and derivatives, rather than central bank policy; the nature of risk has changed as derivatives have spawned more credit, loans have shifted off bank balance sheets and into a diversified pool of investors; more credit equals more liquidity; the insurance function role of derivatives whereby risk is ’sliced and diced’, freeing up banks to make more loans; the growth in liquidity mirrors closely the exponential rise in asset prices with lower volatility; the drivers of credit are 1. risk appetite 2. long term cost of capital 3. low volatility.

David Roche sees all three of the above drivers as vulnerable to change. This is the ‘three bears test’.