When looking at risk, the fund does have a beta higher than that of its large cap blended peers. The beta of the fund is roughly 1.23 as compared with a beta of 1.04 for many of its peers. This can be attributed to the large concentration in financial stocks which tend to have high betas relative to the market. This is to be expected as financial shares raise disproportionately more when the economy recovers and fall just a much when the economy enters recession. The standard deviation of the portfolio is also higher at 18.15 relative to its peer group standard deviation of 15.86. These numbers again reflect the volatility inherent in a portfolio with 40% of the assets in cyclical industries such as banking and technology.
To improve performance and volatility in the fund, I would recommend two courses of action. First, I would lower the expense ration and change compensation of the manager to one that is more long-term in nature. For example, I would compensate the manager as a percentage of how much he beats the benchmark index over a five-year time horizon. This I believe will better align the interest of the manager with the interest of the shareholder. This in turn, will allow the fund to have a long-term view of asset allocation as oppose to the short sighted nature currently prevailing. Second, I would significantly lower the turnover of the portfolio. At 64%, the fund manager is turning over the portfolio too much to achieve long-term performance similar to that of the bench mark index. By changing the overall portfolio mandate and manager compensation, turnover will be reduced thus enhancing long-term returns for the shareholder.
In regards to volatility, as a manager, I would...
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