Los: 40 Portfolio Management: An Overview: A Portfolio Perspective On Investing
Los: 40 Portfolio Management: An Overview: A Portfolio Perspective On Investing
Los: 40 Portfolio Management: An Overview: A Portfolio Perspective On Investing
The composition of a portfolio matters a great deal. Different portfolios have different risk-
return trade-offs.
Portfolio diversification does not necessarily provide the same level of risk reduction during
times of severe market turmoil as it does when the economy and markets are operating
normally.
The modern portfolio theory says that the value of an additional security to a portfolio
ought to be measured along with its relationship to all of the other securities in the
portfolio.
Investment Clients
There are different types of investment clients.
Different individual investors have different investment goals, levels of risk tolerance, and
constraints. Some seek growth while others may invest to get regular income.
An institutional investor's role is to act as a highly specialized investor on behalf of others.
There are many types of institutional investors.
A pension plan is a fund that provides retirement income to employees. It is typically considered
a long-term investor with high risk tolerance and low liquidity needs.
In a defined contribution plan, the employer agrees to contribute a certain sum each
period based on a formula. Only the employer's contribution is defined; no promise is made
regarding the ultimate benefits paid out to the employee. The employee accepts the
investment risk.
A defined benefit plan defines the benefits that the employee will receive at the time of
retirement. That is, the employer assumes the risk of the investment, and is responsible for
the payment of the defined benefits regardless of what happens in the investment.