Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

Fund of funds

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Investment strategy
For the Swiss investment fund, seeInvestors Overseas Service.
This articleneeds additional citations forverification. Please helpimprove this article byadding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
Find sources: "Fund of funds" – news ·newspapers ·books ·scholar ·JSTOR
(June 2008) (Learn how and when to remove this message)

A"fund of funds" (FOF) is aninvestment strategy of holding a portfolio of other investment funds rather than investing directly instocks,bonds or othersecurities. This type of investing is often referred to asmulti-manager investment. A fund of funds may be "fettered", meaning that it invests only in funds managed by the same investment company, or "unfettered", meaning that it can invest in external funds run by other managers.

There are different types of FOF, each investing in a different type ofcollective investment scheme (typically one type per FOF), for example amutual fund FOF, ahedge fund FOF, aprivate-equity FOF, or aninvestment trust FOF.[1] The original Fund of Funds was created byBernie Cornfeld in 1962. It went bankrupt after being looted byRobert Vesco.[2]

Features

[edit]

Investing in a collective investment scheme may increase diversity compared with a small investor holding a smaller range of securities directly. Investing in a fund of funds may achieve greaterdiversification. According tomodern portfolio theory, the benefit of diversification can be the reduction of volatility while maintaining average returns. However, this is countered by the increased fees paid both at FOF level and at the level of the underlying investment fund.

Considerations

[edit]

Management fees for FOFs are typically higher than those on traditional investment funds because they include the management fees charged by the underlying funds.[3]

In its article on Funds of Funds, Investopedia notes that, "Historically, a fund of funds showed an expense figure that didn't always include the fees of the underlying funds. As of January 2007, theSEC began requiring that these fees be disclosed in a line called 'Acquired Fund Fees and Expenses' (AFFE)."[4][5]

After allocation of the levels of fees payable and taxation, returns on FOF investments will generally be lower than what single-manager funds can yield. However, some FOFs waive the second level of fees (the FOF fee) so that investors only pay the expenses of the underlying mutual funds.[6]

Pension funds, endowments and other institutions often invest in funds of hedge funds for part or all of their "alternative asset" programs, i.e., investments other than traditional stock and bond holdings.[citation needed]

Thedue diligence and safety of investing in FOFs has come under question as a result of theBernie Madoffinvestment scandal, where many FOFs put substantial investments into the scheme. It became clear that a motivation for this was the lack of fees by Madoff, which gave the illusion that the FOF was performing well. The due diligence of the FOFs apparently did not include asking why Madoff was not making this charge for his services.[7] 2008 and 2009 saw FOFs take a battering from investors and the media on all fronts from the hollow promises made by over-eager marketers to the strength (or lack) of their due diligence processes to those carefully explained and eminently justifiable extra layers of fees, all reaching their zenith with the Bernie Madoff fiasco.[8]

These strategic and structural issues have caused fund-of-funds to become less and less popular. Nonetheless, fund-for-funds remain important in particular asset classes, including venture capital and for particular investors in order for them to be able to diversify their too low or too high level of assets under management appropriately.[9]

Asset allocation

[edit]
Main article:Asset allocation

The FOF structure may be useful for asset-allocation funds, that is, an "exchange-traded fund (ETF) of ETFs" or "mutual fund of mutual funds". For example,iShares has asset-allocation ETFs, which own other iShares ETFs.[10] Similarly,Vanguard has asset-allocation mutual funds, which own other Vanguard mutual funds. The "parent" funds may own the same "child" funds, with different proportions to allow for "aggressive" to "conservative" allocation. This structure simplifies management by separating allocation from security selection.

Target-date fund

[edit]
Main article:Target date fund

A target-date fund is similar to an asset-allocation fund, except that the allocation is designed to change over time. The same structure is useful here.iShares has target-date ETFs that own other iShares ETFs; Vanguard has target-date mutual funds that own other Vanguard mutual funds. In both cases, the same funds are used as the asset-allocation funds. Since a provider may have many target dates, this can greatly reduce duplication of work.

Private-equity funds

[edit]

According toPreqin (formerly known as Private Equity Intelligence), in 2006, funds investing in otherprivate-equity funds (i.e., FOFs, includingsecondary funds) amounted to 14% of all committed capital in theprivate-equity market. The following ranking of private-equity FOF investment managers is based on information published by Preqin in 2020:[11]

RankName of the firmAssets under management
(billions of USD)
Headquarters
1Partners Group100SwitzerlandBaar, Switzerland
2Goldman Sachs AIMS PE65United StatesNew York
3Hamilton Lane65United StatesConshohocken, Pennsylvania
4HarbourVest Partners63United StatesBoston, Massachusetts
5Pathway Capital Management62United StatesIrvine, California
6Fort Washington Investment Advisors52United StatesCincinnati, Ohio
7Pantheon Ventures47United KingdomLondon
8AlpInvest Partners42United StatesNew York
9Adams Street Partners40United StatesChicago, Illinois
10Caixagest39PortugalLisbon, Portugal

Fund of hedge funds

[edit]

Afund of hedge funds is a fund of funds that invests in a portfolio of differenthedge funds to provide broad exposure to the hedge fund industry and to diversify the risks associated with a single investment fund. Funds of hedge funds select hedge fund managers and construct portfolios based upon those selections. The fund of hedge funds is responsible for hiring and firing the managers in the fund. Some funds of hedge funds might have only one hedge fund in them, which lets ordinary investors into a highly acclaimed fund, or many hedge funds.

Funds of hedge funds generally charge a fee for their services, always in addition to the hedge fund's management and performance fees, which can be 1.5% and 15–30%, respectively. Fees can reduce an investor's profits and potentially reduce the total return below what could be achieved through a less expensivemutual fund orexchange-traded fund (ETF).

Fund of venture capital funds

[edit]

Afund of venture capital funds is a fund of funds that invests in a portfolio of differentventure capital funds for access to private capital markets. Clients are usually university endowments and pension funds.[12]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Definition of fund of funds".Financial Times Lexicon. Financial Times. 2015-03-08. Retrieved2015-03-08.
  2. ^De Vries, M. F. R. "The entrepreneurial personality: a person at the crossroads."Journal of management studies 14.1 (1977): 34–57.
  3. ^"Complexity pays".The Economist. 27 November 2009.
  4. ^"Fund of Funds (FOF) Definition".Investopedia. Retrieved2021-12-15.
  5. ^"Final Rule: Fund of Funds Investments"(PDF).sec.gov. Retrieved27 January 2024.
  6. ^Smith, David M (2010). "Mutual Fund Fees and Expenses". In Haslem, John A. (ed.).Mutual Funds: Portfolio Structures, Analysis, Management, and Stewardship. Wiley. pp. 51–74.
  7. ^"Madoff money".The Economist. 12 December 2008.
  8. ^Opalesque (28 August 2009)."Fund of funds take a public beating in post-Madoff era".
  9. ^"When Fund-Of-Funds for Venture Work".Alerion Ventures. 2012-10-11. Retrieved2021-12-27.
  10. ^"iShares Adds Four Allocation ETFs to Core Lineup - Yahoo Finance". Yahoo! Finance.
  11. ^"FUND OF FUNDS PE VC CREDIT | 5Capital Advisors Placement Agent". 2023-06-06. Archived fromthe original on 2023-06-06. Retrieved2023-08-19.
  12. ^TrueBridge (27 August 2009)."Market Analysis: State of the Venture Capital Industry".

External links

[edit]
Investment
fund
structures
Investment styles
Terminology
Theory
Related topics
Investment types
History
Terms and
concepts
Buyout
Venture
Structure
Investors
Related
financial terms
Investment
strategy
Arbitrage /
relative value
Event-driven
Directional
Other
Trading
Related
terms
Markets
Misc
Investors
Governance
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Fund_of_funds&oldid=1260119855"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp