Vancouver Meeting: New Insights into Short Extension Strategies & Market Dislocation


Thursday, March 20, 2008 - 4:00pm

The Vancouver Club, 915 West Hastings Street, Vancouver
 Vancouver Chapter www.qwafafew.org qwafafew.vancouver@gmail.org



Event Notice:


Invitation to an MSCI Barra presentation:


"New Insights into Short Extension Strategies & Market Dislocation"

Presentation summary below.



Speaker: Jennifer Bender, V.P. Applied Research, MSCI Barra 


Date/Time:    Thursday, March 20, 2008 at 4PM to 530PM

Location:       The Vancouver Club, 915 West Hastings Street, Vancouver


Admission:    Admission is Free, Limited appetizers and drinks will be served


RSVP:           Reservations are required.

Registering is easy - click here, or go to the following address:

http://www.mscibarra.com/events/event.jsp?event_id=267


Space is limited and will be allocated on a first-come first-served basis.


Questions:     Email Dion Roseman at qwafafew.vancouver@gmail.org




Presentation Summary:



New Insights into Short Extension Strategies

We look beyond the conceptual advantages of active extension strategies to focus on some of the important implementation challenges: What is the optimal leverage ratio given a set of expected returns and risk targets and will the optimal leverage ratio change over time? What are some of the key differences between 130/30 and a strategy based on long market exposure combined with a 30/30 market neutral strategy? Performance attribution for 130/30 strategies is yet another challenge, and we will highlight some important issues. These are just some of the questions critical to institutional investors moving further into the active extension world.

Market “Dislocation”

High volatility regimes share an unnerving quality that drives many market participants to take quick action. Importantly, there are significant structural differences between turbulent periods that can be analyzed with factor models. We examine three such periods: the sub-prime mortgage crisis (2007), the bursting of the internet bubble (2000), and the rouble default and collapse of Long Term Capital Management (1998). We show how factor models provide information required by both asset managers and asset owners to make effective decisions in a crisis

About the speaker: Jennifer Bender 

Ms. Bender is a Vice President in Applied Research at MSCI Barra, where she works on portfolio management and risk related research for asset owners and investment managers. Previously Ms. Bender was a quantitative analyst at State Street Associates.  Ms. Bender's research areas in addition to risk management and portfolio theory include investor behavior, market microstructure, market efficiency and asset pricing. Ms. Bender has held research assistantships at Harvard Business School and MIT, and spent four years as an economist for Standard & Poor's DRI.  Ms. Bender holds a PhD and MS from Brandeis University in International Economics and Finance.