Down-Market Capture Ratio
  
Investment managers have a singular goal: make money. But it doesn't always happen. Sometimes it's because the manager put all the firm's money into Fyre Festival 2. Other times, the manager is invested in the market when the entire market goes down, and she shoulda held cash. The general market drops and the fund loses money along with everyone else.
In those times, when the fund loses money because the general market is down, how do you know whether a fund manager did a good job or not? They lost money. But everyone lost money.
You need some kind of benchmark. Enter the Down-Market Capture index. It provides a way to measure the performance of a fund manager when the overall market is down. It's a kind of relative strength index or relative performance metric.
Every fund has a benchmark index. You run a fund that invests in technology stocks. To figure out whether or not you're doing a good job, you compare your performance to an index fund that tracks the overall technology space, something like the Nasdaq-100 Technology Sector Index. (And you had better beat that number consistently, because index funds are cheap for the investor...like 0.3% or so a year to manage versus a mutual fund paying your fat fee of 1% or more a year.)
To see how you did, you compare how your fund performed compared to the performance of the Nasdaq-100 Tech index. If the Nasdaq-100 fell 7% and your fund only fell 5%, you did all right. If your fund fell 10%, then maybe you should consider going back to law school.
Here's how you figure out the Down-Market Capture Index. Take your performance and the performance of the benchmark. Figure out the ratio between the two. Multiply the answer by 100. If the answer is above 100, you beat the market. If the answer is below 100, you'll need to fix your performance, or your clients will start looking elsewhere.
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Finance: What's the Difference Between M...121 Views
And finance allah shmoop what's the difference between mutual funds
and index funds The answer this guy or well this
team what do they do They manage the mutual fund
mutually together You know what nemo They make bets on
apple and amazon in crotchless tuxedo pants Dot com will
these bets or into teligent investments In the parlance of
the industry our elements oven actively managed fund The mutual
fund is active in that it buys and sells hoping
to be smarter than the market and find areas you
know where they're inefficiencies where investors are throwing out the
baby with the bath water so that they buy the
shares here a twelve bucks and hope to sell them
if they hit thirty bucks in two years when the
new products get released and people are going absolutely bonkers
for self velcro ing neckties or whatever and index generally
stands pat on the hand It's dealt throughout the course
of the year making only small tweaks to invested amount
so that the fund itself conforms to the structure or
rules it set out when it was created But there
are a few vital and insidious differences that should make
investors today very wary about investing in mutual funds or
any actively managed fund When mutual funds first became popular
the investing marketplace was kind of the wild wild west
that was the nineteen fifties and sixties and a savvy
fund manager could beat the market by five and even
twenty percent per year year over year It was kind
of a golden age of mutual funds and money flowed
into them But like all good things this market wrinkle
easy winds and the investing world had to come to
an end Why competition when there were only a few
mutual funds out there and a few private investors it
was relatively easy to identify baby bathwater things you know
diamonds in the rough Today there are literally thousands of
mutual funds With such massive competition performance relative to the
market has lagged dramatic In fact over a typical seven
to ten year holding period only a very small handful
of mutual funds beat the typical index fund investing in
the same or analogous areas of stocks or bonds It's
like one in twenty ever really beat the market and
it gets worse Mutual funds charge relatively large fees compared
With index funds whereas a typical index fund might charge
twenty basis points to manage your money that is twenty
cents for every hundred bucks you have with them for
year The analogous mutual fund My charge One percent or
more that's five times surprise for demonstrably no better investment
results and wait It gets even worse Mutual funds trade
stocks and bonds and other securities index funds rarely trade
or if they do it's a very small amount of
trading around the margin keeping index in compliance with its
legal charter But many mutual funds have turn over the
apple variety of like fifty eighty or even one hundred
percent Turn over means that a fund has sold the
stock to realize a taxable gain You know book a
profit by taking cash from selling the stock or to
realize a loss sometimes as well we'll each time of
fund transact It pays a commission to our friendly excellent
golf skilled brokers but more painful to most investors is
that in transacting the fund realizes taxable game So what
does that mean Well here's the math If your mutual
fund is up twelve percent given year when the market's
up ten percent it would be an absolute top of
the pyramid performance here For the fun of beating the
market by two hundred basis points would likely mean that
mutual fund was in the top forty right up there
with rina's latest it single So what is that awesome
performance after tax for the mutual fund Well if the
fund had traded like the typical one it would have
had turnover of about sixty percent of its assets and
half of those sales would get ordinary income tax treatment
think high rates of something like forty percent with federal
and state taxes combined for most and long term gain
of twenty percent for the rest Well the wealthy pay
higher taxes so we're rounding down the numbers here even
being conservative So if half of the sixty percent or
thirty percent of the gain of twelve percent which is
around four percent his tax at forty percent then take
away one point six percent from the performance to get
an after tax net result number Then after another thirty
percent tax at the long term gain rate of twenty
percent you'd have take away another point six percent so
in total you'd have to subtract one point six plus
point six or two point two percent from the twelve
percent humongous rock star year to net nine point eight
percent in after tax returns Nope not very exciting relative
to that index fund And yes there are differences here
even important ones But the bottom line is that if
a huge performance top two percent fun has results Not
much better and or maybe worse than just a basic
index funds Why does anyone invest in mutual funds anymore 00:04:49.487 --> [endTime] Well this guy
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