Is the KIID sufficient to associate portfolios to investor profiles?Hübner, Georges ![]() in Bankers, Markets, Investors [=BMI] (2012), (118), 14-22 With the Key Investor Information Document (KID), the new UCITS IV framework brings a useful standardized and simplified scheme to explain the risk of mutual funds to non-professional investors. The ... [more ▼] With the Key Investor Information Document (KID), the new UCITS IV framework brings a useful standardized and simplified scheme to explain the risk of mutual funds to non-professional investors. The Synthetic Risk and Reward Indicator (SRRI) methodology defines how to assess a volatility equivalent for each type of funds, and recognizes the specificities of various types of investment vehicles in the process. The SRRI rests upon two key principles: (i) risk-volatility mapping: the level of risk can be adequately translated by the volatility of returns; and (ii) reward to volatility: there must be a positive connection between the level of risk borne by the individual investor and the associated reward in terms of returns. We show that the SRRI methodology does not guarantee that these two principles are respected in practice. By forcing any type of risk to be translated into a volatility estimate, the approach overlooks investor’s heterogeneity in the definition of risk. The SRRI synthetic approach is powerless to adequately reflect the trade-off between normal and extreme risks the way it is perceived by individual investors. It also ignores that fund returns are not necessarily only related to volatility. We show that the KID does not replace a proper investment profiling system. The analysis of investor profiles is a necessary complement to the KID in order to provide adequate advice to investors. We provide an approach, based on the linear-exponential utility function, that enables the financial advisor to address the heterogeneity of investors when defining the risk of an investment portfolio. [less ▲] Detailed reference viewed: 36 (2 ULg) Ownership Structure and Stock Market Liquidity in FranceAjina, Aymen ; in Bankers, Markets, Investors [=BMI] (2010), 104 This paper examines the effects of concentrated ownership structure and shareholder’s type on the French stock-market liquidity. The results show that ownership concentration negatively affects market ... [more ▼] This paper examines the effects of concentrated ownership structure and shareholder’s type on the French stock-market liquidity. The results show that ownership concentration negatively affects market liquidity suggesting that large shareholders are likely to exacerbate information asymmetry, widen bid-ask spreads and decrease stock market liquidity. The findings also show that the proportion of institutional investors has a positive effect on market liquidity. These investors are inclined to trade more frequently on their stocks and to shrink bid-ask spreads. These findings are in line with adverse selection and trading hypotheses and shed the light on the role of corporate governance devices to consider shareholder minority interest’s protection, which leads to improved stock market liquidity levels. [less ▲] Detailed reference viewed: 173 (21 ULg) |
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