Posts

GW Private Equity and Venture Capital Club

The Private Equity and Venture Capital Club is spearheaded by Chung Hei Sing and Hassan Aljeshi. Chung, Founder and Co-Preisdent, is a 4th year student and B…

http://www.venturefund.com – Venture Fund helps connect entrepreneurs looking to raise business finance from private investors, venture capital or private eq…

Libyan Energy Turmoil, Twitter Storm & Cost of Beauty [VENTURE CAPITAL E15]

This week another round of protests in Libya threaten gas exports to Italy – with winter on the way – it’s Italians that could be left in the cold. Katie Pil. This week another round of protests…
Video Rating: 0 / 5

M2M and Venture Capital panel part 1

BIGfrontier’s Steve Lundin leads a one hour discussion for M2M magazine with Todd Clapp, Catalyst Investors, Diana Propper, Expansion Capital Partners, Alex …

Venture capital drives high-tech value

Tim Chang is principle of Norwest Venture Partners and a heavy hitter in the world of high-tech venture capital.

Venture Capital and Angel Investor Profiles – CB Insights

Venture Capital and Angel Investor Profiles - CB Insights

The world’s most extensive venture capital and angel investor database, CB Insights, offers you a quick, simple and intuitive platform to get you the data an…
Video Rating: 5 / 5

Sean Seton-Rogers, venture capital fund Benchmark Capital

recorded @ TMT.Ventures ’07 Warsaw – the most interesting event for venture capital and private equity industry in Central Europe.
Video Rating: 5 / 5

9/24/2009: Angel and Venture Capital Investment Overview

9/24/2009: Angel and Venture Capital Investment Overview

2008-2009 saw an unprecedented restructuring of the financial markets, including the market for angel and venture capital. Our panel of expert angel and vent…
Video Rating: 5 / 5

Bill Comfort, Former Chairman – Citigroup Venture Capital

Bill Comfort is a legendary figure in the venture capital space. He graduated with both a B.A. and an L.L.B. from the University of Oklahoma and moved to New…

CPCO6 – Más allá de la triple "F": Business Angels & Venture Capital

Over the last 20 years game developers and venture capitalists have had an uneasy relationship. VCs often want to invest in technology, not in one off produc…

Hypo Venture Capital – Funds: Why This Could be the Answer Your Looking For!

Here at Hypo Venture Capital we are committed to offering our clients access to the latest and broadest range of financial services and products on the market. We know that choosing the right strategy, the right investment and the right product is no easy task in this day and age! Whether its advice, investments or financial planning we are here to answer all your questions and facilitate all your financial needs.

Here we look to dispel some of the jargon and confusion surrounding ‘Funds’, breaking them down, with no nonsense explanations in an attempt to help you understand this strategic investment.

Starting out?

Many newcomers to equity investment are nervous about investing in individual firms – and with good reason. Putting all your money into a few stocks is a high-risk strategy, especially for the inexperienced, because it leaves you vulnerable to sharp fluctuations in the share price of the individual stocks you pick, not the markets in which they trade. If you get it right and pick winners, great. But if you pick a couple of big losers, your whole portfolio will be scuppered. Collective or ‘pooled’ investments can diversify your holdings and therefore reduce that risk.

Why pooled funds?

Unit trusts, open-ended investment companies (Oeics, pronounced ‘oiks’) and investment trusts are all vehicles that let you pool your money with lots of other ‘retail’ – or small – investors. (In the US, this kind of investment is known as a ‘mutual fund’.) The pooled money is then invested on your behalf in a wide range of different equities by specialist fund managers. (There are also funds that invest in bonds or other assets, such as commercial property or commodities.) The fund manager takes a fee to run the fund and research what stocks to buy.

If they get it right, it means you get access to a highly diversified range of stocks at a reasonable cost. It also gives you easy access to asset classes and international markets that would otherwise be difficult and/or expensive to invest in. For example, specialist funds are available that invest only in Japan, or Latin America, or only in technology firms, and so on. Also, different funds are designed to meet different investment objectives and there’s a wide range to choose from. Some aim for income, some for capital growth, and some for a balance of the two.

Unit trusts and Oeics

Until recently, unit trusts were the main kind of collective retail investment in the UK. With a unit trust, you buy a fixed number of units in a fund, which then rise and fall according to the value of the underlying assets the trust invests in. Over the past few years, many fund managers have converted their unit trusts into Oeics in the belief that investors find them simpler to understand. From the point of view of the investor, Oeics are more or less the same as unit trusts; they are ‘open-ended’ in the sense that (like unit trusts) the fund’s size expands and contracts depending on investor demand. The big difference is that Oeics have only one price (as opposed to the dual bid/offer pricing of unit trusts).

Investment trusts

Like Oeics, investment trusts are firms whose business is to invest in the shares of other companies. But unlike unit trusts and Oeics, investment trusts are ‘closed-ended’: there are a fixed number of shares in issue, which are traded on the stock exchange. The purpose of an investment trust is, broadly speaking, the same as an Oeic – to give smaller investors cheap access to a wide range of shares. But they are structured rather differently.

The fact that investment trust shares are traded on the open market (the London Stock Exchange) means the share price is determined not just by the value of the trust’s underlying assets, but by current market demand for its shares. Sometimes, if an investment trust is popular, it will trade at a premium to its net asset value (NAV). Other times, it will be trading at a discount.

Investment trusts can borrow money (called “gearing”), often up to 10%-15% of the value of assets and use it to invest in the markets. This is great if the markets go up, but of course the funds losses escalate if they fall.

The final significant difference is that investment trusts are cheaper to buy than unit trusts or Oeics. Actively managed unit trusts have upfront fees of anything up to 5%-6% of the investment, plus an annual management fee of around 1.5%. By contrast, charges on investment trusts are typically less than 1%.

Passive or active?

One way of minimising the cost is to go for an index-tracking fund. These funds aim to match or ‘track’ the performance of a given market index, such as the FTSE All-Share or the FTSE 100. They do this using computer programs to work out how much of each individual stock they need to buy and sell to mimic the performance of the index as a whole.

That’s much cheaper than employing lots of expensive ‘experts’ and researchers, so index-trackers are much cheaper than ‘actively-managed’ funds. Index-trackers might seem like a safety-first option, but there’s a great deal of research evidence to suggest that they outperform most actively managed funds over the long-run because their charges are so low (typically 0.5%, or even less).

Another good ‘passive’ form of pooled investment is the exchange-traded fund (ETF). These work like index-trackers, in that they target a particular market or sector index, but are traded as shares, allowing for a cheap and highly flexible investment.

Want to know more?

Hypo Venture Capital is an independent investment advisory firm which focuses on global equities and options markets. Our analytical tools, screening techniques, rigorous research methods and committed staff provide solid information to help our clients make the best possible investment decisions. All views, comments, statements and opinions are of the authors. For more information go to www.hypovc.com

 

Hypo Venture Capital is an independent investment advisory firm which focuses on global equities and options markets. Our analytical tools, screening techniques, rigorous research methods and committed staff provide solid information to help our clients make the best possible investment decisions. All views, comments, statements and opinions are of the authors. For more information go to www.hypovc.com

Related Venture Capital Articles