ALTERNATIVE INVESTMENT NOTES
What are Alternative Investments?
They are highly risky, nontraditional investments
Features:
      Alternative Investments differs from traditional investments (publicly
       traded stocks, bonds, cash) both in the types of assets and securities.
      Managers of alternative investment portfolio may use derivatives and
       leverage and short securities.
      Fees structures are different with higher management fees on
       average and often with additional incentives fees based on performance
      Alternative investment as a grp have had low returns correlations with
       traditional investments.
Fund investing: Basically indirect investing, where investor contributes money
to a fund, and the fund makes investment on the investor’s behalf.
Co-investing: a hybrid between direct and indirect investing, where the investor
can make investing alongside a fund.
Direct investing: the investor makes a direct investment in a company or
project without using an intermediary.
Compared to Traditional Investments, they exhibit several of the following
Characteristics:
      Less liquidity of assets held.
      more specialisation by investment managers
      less regulation and transparency
      more problematic and less available historical returns and volatility data
      different legal issues and tax treatment
      low correlation with return of traditional investment
      high fees
      restriction on redemption
      relatively more concentrated portfolios
Categories of Alternative Investments:
      Private equity funds
      hedge funds.
      Real Estate
      Commodities
      Infrastructure
      other like fine wines stamps automobiles antique furniture and art as well
       as patent and intangible asset.
   What are PE funds?
          Private Equity Funds refers to one of the investments in companies.
          Recapitalisation is a strategy where the company issues debt to fund a distribution
                                        to equity holders (PE firm)
ALTERNATIVE INVESTMENT NOTES
   Where do PE Funds invest in?
       o   In private companies
       o   in public companies which they intend to take private
       o   in the case of public companies, such financing is referred to as private
           investment in public equities (PIPEs)
Leveraged Buyout Funds
   o   Acquiring public companies or established private companies with the
       significant percentage of the purchase price finance through debt.
   o   The asset of the target company typically served as the collateral for the
       debt and the cash flow of the target company are expected to be sufficient
       to service the debt.
Venture Capital Funds
   o   Entails investing in or providing financing to private companies with high
       growth potential
   o   The investment by venture capitals is mostly into startup or young
       companies
Development capital funds
   o   Also called as Minority equity investments they invest in more mature
       companies that are looking for capital to expand (growth) or restructure
       operations, enter new markets, or finance major acquisition
Distressed investment funds
   o   Typically in tales buying the death of mature companies in financial
       difficulties
   o   The companies may be in bankruptcy proceedings, defaulted on deaths or
       seem likely to default on debt
   o   Investors buy the company’s debt in expectation of the company and its
       debt increasing in value
   o   Turn around investors by debt and plan to be more active in the
       management and directions of the company
Private Equity strategies:
   1. Leveraged buyouts (LBOs)
   o They are the most common type of pvt equity fund investment
   o Leveraged refers to the fact that the fund’s purchase of the portfolio
      company is funded primarily by debt
   o This may be bank debt (Leverage buyouts),high yield bonds, or
      mezzanine Financing
Mezzanine Financing refers to debt or preferred shares that are subordinate to
the high yield bonds issued and carry warrants or conversion features that give
investors participation in equity value increases.
HOW DOES AN LBO WORK?
ALTERNATIVE INVESTMENT NOTES
In and LBO the PE firm seeks to increase the value of the firm through some
combination of new management, management incentives, restructuring, cost
reduction or revenue enhancement
  firms with high cash flow are attractive LBO candidates because their cash
flow can be used to service and eventually pay down the debt taken on for
acquisitions
TYPES OF LBOs
   1. Management buy-outs (MBOs) – existing management team is involved in
      the purchase and
   2. Management buy-ins (MBIs) - external management team will replace the
      existing management team
   2. VENTURE CAPITAL FUNDS
      o Venture capital invest in companies in the early stage of their
        development
      o The investment often is in the form of equity but can be in convertible
        preferred shares or convertible debts
      o while the risk of startup companies is often great, returns on successful
        companies can be very high
      o This is often the case when a company has grown to a point where it
        can be the sold (at least in part)to the public via an IPO
      o The company that is being invested in is often called the portfolio
        company
      o Venture capitals are not passive investors but they are actively in world
        with the companies in which they invest
Investment Stages of VC:
   A. The Formative Stage
It refers to investment made during a firm’s earliest period and
comprises three distinct phases.
ANGEL INVESTING refers to investment made very early in a firm’s Life, open
the “idea” stage and the investment funds are used for business plans and
assessing market potential. The funding source is usually individuals rather than
venture capital funds
THE SEED STAGE refers to investment made for product development,
marketing and market research. This is typically the stage during which venture
capital funds make initial investment through ordinary or convertible preferred
shares.
EARLY STAGE refers to investment made to fund initial commercial production
and sales
   B. Later Stage Financing (expansion venture capital) is provided after
      commercial production and sales have begun before an IPO funds may be
      used for initial expansion of company already producing and selling so that
      or for major expansion
ALTERNATIVE INVESTMENT NOTES
   C. Mezzanine stage financing is provided to prepare to go public and
      represent the bridge between the expanding company and the IPO
STUCTURE AND FEES
PE structure and Fees: PE funds are typically structured as a partnerships where:
Limited Partners – are outside investors are and
General Partners – are the private equity firm, which may manage a number
of funds
Exit Strategy, Benefits, risks & Due Diligence
PVT EQUITY EXIT STRATEGIES : The avg holding period for companies in PE
portfolios is around Five Years.
There are several primary methods of exist exciting and investment in portfolio
company:
   1. Trade sale: sale of portfolio company to a competitor or another strategic
      buyer
   2. IPO: Send on or some shares of a portfolio company to the public.
   3. Recapitalization : the company issues debt fund a dividend
      distribution to equity holder(the fund) .This is not an exit in that the fund
      still controls the company but is often a step towards an exit
   4. secondary sale: Sell a portfolio company to another PE firm or a group
      of investors
   5. write off/ liquidation: reassess and adjust to take losses from an
      unsuccessful outcome
PRIVATE EQUITY POTIENTIAL BENEFITS AND RISKS:
Benefits                                  Risks
   An immediate cash exit for the            Possible      opposition   by
     PE fund                                    management
   Potential for high valuation of           Lower      attractiveness   to
     the asset                                  employees of the portfolio
   Fast and simple execution                   company
   Lower transaction costs than an           Limited number of potential
     IPO                                        trade buyers
   Lower levels of disclosure and            A possible lower price than in
     higher confidentiality                     an IPO
ALTERNATIVE INVESTMENT NOTES
PRIVATE EQUITY Due Diligence
Because of the language typically used for funds investor should investigate
below factors prior to investing in private equity
      Interest rates and availability of capital
      Choice of manager (general partner)
      Operating and financial experience of the manager
      The valuation methods loose mixed line the incentive fee structures and
       drawdown procedure
PRIVATE EQUITY Company Valuation :
   1. Market/comparable approach: Market or private transaction values of
      similar companies may be used to estimate multiples of EBITDA, Net
      Income, or Revenue to use in estimating the portfolio company’s value
   2. Discounted cash flow approach: Under this we will calculate the PV of
      free cash flow to the firm or free cash flow to equity
   3. Asset-Based Approach: Either the liquidation values or fair MV of assets
      can be used Liquidation values will be lower as they are values that could
      be realized quickly in a situation of financial distress or termination of
      company operations. Liabilities are subtracted so only the equity portion of
      the firm’s value is being estimated.
HEDGE    FUNDS: employ a large number of different strategies
A contemporary hedge fund may have the following characteristics:
ALTERNATIVE INVESTMENT NOTES
       Aggressively managed portfolio- leveraged, long short positions, uses
        derivatives.
       Goal of generating high returns
       Return objectives- absolute basis or relative benchmark.
       Private Investment Partnership open to limited partner with large
        ticket investment.
        Restrictions on redemptions - lockup period, notice period.
Funds of Hedge Funds (FOF)
       They Are funds that hold a portfolio of hedge funds. They has higher fees
       FOF invests in numerous HFs, diversifying across fund strategies,
        investment regions and management styles.
Hedge funds Classification
Hedge funds are typically classified by strategy, although categorisation vary.
These classifications change over time as new strategis es, often bees on new
products and opportunities in the market are introduced
THE FOUR BROAD categories of strategies are
       Event Driven Strategy
       Relative Value Strategies
       Macro Strategies
       Equity Hedge Fund Strategies
   1)   Event Driven Strategy : They are typically based on a corporate
        restructuring or acquisition that creates profit opportunities for long or
        short positions in common equity , preferred equity, or debt of a specific
        corporation. SUBCATEGORIES are :
       Merger arbitrage: buy shares of firm being acquired and sell short the
        firm making the acquisition
       Distressed restructuring: buy the (undervalued) securities of firms in
        financial distress when analysis indicates value will be increased by a
        successful restructuring: possibly short overvalued securities types at the
        same time
       Activist shareholder: buy sufficient equity shares to influence
        companies policies with the goal of increasing company value
       special situation: invest in the securities of firms that are issuing or
        repurchasing securities spinning off divisions, selling asset or
        distributing capital
   2) Relative Value Strategies : They involve buying a security with a gold of
      profiting when a pursuit pricing discrepancy between the 2 is resolved
      they include:
    Convertible arbitrage fixed income: exploit pricing discrepancies
      between convertible bonds and the common stock of the issuing
      companies
    Asset backed fixed income: exploit pricing discrepancies among
      various mortageg backed securities (MBS) or (ABS)
ALTERNATIVE INVESTMENT NOTES
     General fixed income: exploit pricing discrepancies between fixed
      income securities and the various bonds
     Multi-strategy: Exploit pricing discrepancies between securities in asset
      classes different from those previously listed and across asset classes and
      markets
  3) Macro strategies: They are based on global economics trends and events
     and may involve long and short positions in equities, fixed income,
     currencies or commodities.
  4) Equity hedge fund strategies : day seek to profit from long or short
     positions in publicly trade equities and derivatives with equities as their
     underlying assets and include:
        o Market neutral: use technical and fundamental analysis to select
            undervalued equities to be held long and to select overvalued
            equities to be sold short in approximately equal amounts to profit
            from their relative price movements without exposure to market risk
        o Fundamental growth: use fundamental analysis to find high
            growth companies. Identify and buy equity of companies that are
            expected to sustain relatively high rates of capital appreciation
        o Quantitative directional: buy equity securities believed to be
            undervalued and short securities believed to be overvalued based
            on technical analysis. Market exposure may vary depending on
            relative size of long and short portfolio position
        o Short bias: employee predominantly short positions in over valued
            equities possibly with smaller long positions but with negative
            market exposure overall.
NOTE: many hedge funds tend to specialise in a specific strategy at first
and overtime may develop or additional areas of expertise, becoming
multi strategies fund.
   HEGDE    FUND                        FEES           AND           OTHER
    CONSIDERATIONS
     Common fee structure in the hedge fund market is 2 and 20 which reflects
      a 2% management fee and a 20 % incentive fees
     Fees structure specifies that the incentive fees is only earned after fund
      achieved specified return known as hurdle rate
     The incentive fee can be based on returns in excess of the hurdle
      rate(HARD) or on the return entire(SOFT HURDLE RATE)
     the fee structure may specify that before an incentive fee is paid following
      year in which the funds value has declined, the funds value must return to
      a previous high watermar Note that the high watermark is typically the
      highest value reported by the fund; the amount reported is net of fees
OTHER CONSIDERATIONS
     Redemptions frequently occur when H fund is performing poorly
ALTERNATIVE INVESTMENT NOTES
     In the hedge fund industry drawndown is a reduction in net asset value.
      When down occur, investors may decide to exit the fund or redeem at
      least a portion of their shares
     Redemptions may require the H fund manager to liquidate some positions
      and incur transaction costs and this may further magnify the loss says on
      the position
     Redemption fees may serve to discourage redemption and to help H fund
      managers recover transaction cost
     Notice periods may allow the Hedge funds manager to liquidate a position
      in an orderly fashion without magnifying the losses.
       Hedge Fund Valuation Issues:
  Multiple Valuation issues
      1. When market prices or quotes are used for valuation, funds may differ
         in which price or quote they use (for example, bid price, ask price, avg
         quote, and median quote)
      2. A common practice is use to the average quote [(bid+ask)/2]
      3. A more conservative and theoretically accurate approach is to use bid
         prices for longs and ask price for shorts
         4. Management fees for PE is typically based on committed capital, not AUM.
  Reliability
    1. The underlying positions may be in highly illiquid or non-traded
        investments and therefore, it is necessary to estimate values because
        there are no reliable market values.
   HEDGE FUND POTENTIAL BENEDITS AND RISKS:
   Hedge funds returns have tended to be better than those of global
    equities in down equity markets and to log the returns of global equities in
    up markets
   Different hedge funds strategies have the best returns during different
    time periods
   Statements about the performance of and diversification benefits of hedge
    funds are problematic because of the great variety of strategies used
   Less than perfect correlations with global equity returns may offer same
    diversification benefits, but correlations tend to increase during periods of
    financial crisis.
Factors to consider when selecting hedge fund:
     Investment strategy                                            Longevity
     Investment process                                             Amt of asset
      under mgmt.
     Historical returns                                      Mgmt style
     Valuation and return calculation methods                     Key person risk
ALTERNATIVE INVESTMENT NOTES
    Reputation
ALTERNATIVE INVESTMENT NOTES
REAL ESTATE:
Real estate investment stand be depreciated according to their underlying
assets. Assets included under the heading of real estate investment include:
      Residential property - single family homes
      commercial property- produces income
      Loans - with residential or commercial property as collateral mortgages
       construction loans ETC
Reasons for investing in real estate include the following:
      Potential for competitive long term total returns driven by both income
       generation and capital appreciation
      Prospect that multiple year leases with fixed rent for some property types
       may lessen cash flow impact from economic shocks
      Likelihood that diversification benefits may be provided by less than
       perfect correlation with other asset classes
      Potential to provide an inflation hedge if rents can be adjusted quickly for
       inflation
Real estate valuation:
THE COMPARABLE SALES APPROACH
      It is based on valuation and recent sales of similar properties
      Values for individual properties include adjustment for differences between
       the characteristics such as age,location, condition ,and size of the specific
       property and those are the properties for which recent sale prices are
       available
THE INCOME APPROACH
Residential Property:
      Takes the form of direct equity investment (i.e., ownership) in a residence
       with the intent to occupy
      Financial institutions are the main providers (originators) of debt financing
       for home ownership
ALTERNATIVE INVESTMENT NOTES
      The originators of single-family residential mortgages are making a direct,
       debt investment in the home
      Home loans may be held on the originator's balance sheet or securitized
       and offered to the financial markets
      Securitization provides indirect, debt investment opportunities in
       residential property via securitized debt products, such as residential
       mortgage-backed securities (RMBS), to other investors
Commercial Real Estate:
      Commercial property has traditionally been considered an appropriate
       direct investment Equity and Debt- for institutional funds or high-net-worth
       individuals with long time horizons and limited liquidity needs
      In order to provide direct debt financing, the lender (investor) will conduct
       financial analyses to establish the creditworthiness of the borrower, to
       ensure that the property will generate cash flows sufficient to service the
       debt, to estimate the value of the property, and to evaluate economic
       conditions
Mortgage-Backed Securities (MBS):
The MBS structure is based on the securitization model of buying a pool of assets
and assigning the income and principal returns in individual security tranchase
Timberland and farmland
Real estate investment trusts (REITs):
      They issue shares that trade publicly like shares of stock
      REITs are often identified by the type of real estate assets they hold:
       mortgages, hotel properties, malls, office buildings, or other commercial
       property
      Income is used to pay dividends which is typically 90% of income must be
       distributed to shareholders to avoid taxes on this income that would have
       to be paid by the REIT before distribution to shareholders
      Equity REITs, which invest primarily in commercial or residential properties
       and employ leverage, are similar to direct equity investments in leveraged
       real estate
      Gross income from rents represents a relatively predictable income stream
       and after servicing the debt, is a source of return to equity REITs
REITs Valuation:
ALTERNATIVE INVESTMENT NOTES
Income-based approach
A measure of income, which is a cash flow proxy, is capitalized into a value
indication by using a cap rate (Ke-g). It is similar to the Direct Capatalization
approach
Asset -based approach
      This approach calculates a REIT’S NAV
      RIET shares frequently trade at prices that differ from its NAV per share
      Both premiums and discounts to the NAV are observed in the market
Diversification benefit of including REITs:
Historically, REIT index returns and global equity returns have had a
relatively strong correlation and that between global bond returns and
REIT return has been very low
In either case diversification benefits can result from including real estate
in an investors portfolio
However, the methods of index construction (e.g., appraisal or repeat
sales indices) may be a factor in the low reported correlation, in which
case actual diversification benefits may be less than expected.
Real Estate Performance is measured by three different types of indices:
   1. An appraisal index:
Prepared by the National Council of Real Estate Investment Fiduciaries
(NCREIF) in US
It is based on periodic estimates of property values
Appraisal index returns are smoother than those based on actual sales
and have the lowest standard deviation of return of the various index
methods
   2. A Repeat sales index:
It is based on price changes for properties that have sold multiple time
(price*properties)
The sample of properties sold included in the index is not necessarily
random but may also not be representative of the broad spectrum of
properties available(an example of sample selection bias)
ALTERNATIVE INVESTMENT NOTES
   3. REIT indices:
They are based on the actual trading prices of REIT shares, similar to
equity indices
Real Estate Investment Risks: