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An investigation into South African property unit trusts: do active managers add value to investors?

Active vs passive management is a central debate within asset management, with active managers promising superior market beating performance after fees through their superior knowledge and stock selection. This study investigates the performance of 34 South African property unit trusts over multiple...

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Main Author: Rickens, Carl
Other Authors: van Rensburg, Paul
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Finance and Tax 2021
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access_status_str Open Access
author Rickens, Carl
author2 van Rensburg, Paul
author_browse Rickens, Carl
van Rensburg, Paul
author_facet van Rensburg, Paul
Rickens, Carl
author_sort Rickens, Carl
collection Thesis
description Active vs passive management is a central debate within asset management, with active managers promising superior market beating performance after fees through their superior knowledge and stock selection. This study investigates the performance of 34 South African property unit trusts over multiple periods between 2005 and 2018. Fund performance was evaluated using three risk-adjusted measures, namely the Sharpe ratio, information ratio and Jensen's alpha, in order to determine whether there is significant outperformance amongst the funds. The benchmark used to compare performance was the South African Listed Property index (SAPY), which is the most common and well established proxy for the South African property market. The sample was divided into three periods, long term 2005-2018, medium term 2008-2018 and short term 2015-2018. In all periods, outperformance of active funds were shown to be inconclusive, with only a small number of funds showing significant positive alphas and significantly high Sharpe and information ratios. A small number of funds achieved outperformance across multiple periods. On average significant outperformance was uncommon and inconsistent. Furthermore, a number of funds achieved significant underperformance over multiple periods, with inferior risk-adjusted returns and alphas compared to the benchmark. However, the volatility of fund returns were shown to be less than the benchmark on average in all periods, indicating that active managers were able to reduce volatility compared to the benchmark. In the more recent short term period, performance of the active funds were especially low with many negative alphas' present. The best performing fund across multiple periods was shown to be a risk parity portfolio of property stocks, which achieved significantly higher returns whilst having lower volatility than the benchmark and other funds. Ultimately the results suggest that active managers in the sector do not provide sufficient evidence for outperformance. Hence investors are better of making use of passive indices or a risk parity portfolio if they are looking for exposure to South African listed property. This is in line with other international studies which have also found that active management in the property industry does not provide significant and consistent outperformance. These results provide useful insight to property investors in South Africa and contribute to the debate between active vs passive management within the financial literature.
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2021
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/33011 An investigation into South African property unit trusts: do active managers add value to investors? Rickens, Carl van Rensburg, Paul Investment Management Active vs passive management is a central debate within asset management, with active managers promising superior market beating performance after fees through their superior knowledge and stock selection. This study investigates the performance of 34 South African property unit trusts over multiple periods between 2005 and 2018. Fund performance was evaluated using three risk-adjusted measures, namely the Sharpe ratio, information ratio and Jensen's alpha, in order to determine whether there is significant outperformance amongst the funds. The benchmark used to compare performance was the South African Listed Property index (SAPY), which is the most common and well established proxy for the South African property market. The sample was divided into three periods, long term 2005-2018, medium term 2008-2018 and short term 2015-2018. In all periods, outperformance of active funds were shown to be inconclusive, with only a small number of funds showing significant positive alphas and significantly high Sharpe and information ratios. A small number of funds achieved outperformance across multiple periods. On average significant outperformance was uncommon and inconsistent. Furthermore, a number of funds achieved significant underperformance over multiple periods, with inferior risk-adjusted returns and alphas compared to the benchmark. However, the volatility of fund returns were shown to be less than the benchmark on average in all periods, indicating that active managers were able to reduce volatility compared to the benchmark. In the more recent short term period, performance of the active funds were especially low with many negative alphas' present. The best performing fund across multiple periods was shown to be a risk parity portfolio of property stocks, which achieved significantly higher returns whilst having lower volatility than the benchmark and other funds. Ultimately the results suggest that active managers in the sector do not provide sufficient evidence for outperformance. Hence investors are better of making use of passive indices or a risk parity portfolio if they are looking for exposure to South African listed property. This is in line with other international studies which have also found that active management in the property industry does not provide significant and consistent outperformance. These results provide useful insight to property investors in South Africa and contribute to the debate between active vs passive management within the financial literature. 2021-02-26T09:15:16Z 2021-02-26T09:15:16Z 2020 2021-02-26T05:53:05Z Master Thesis Masters MCom http://hdl.handle.net/11427/33011 eng application/pdf Department of Finance and Tax Faculty of Commerce
spellingShingle Investment Management
Rickens, Carl
An investigation into South African property unit trusts: do active managers add value to investors?
thesis_degree_str Master's
title An investigation into South African property unit trusts: do active managers add value to investors?
title_full An investigation into South African property unit trusts: do active managers add value to investors?
title_fullStr An investigation into South African property unit trusts: do active managers add value to investors?
title_full_unstemmed An investigation into South African property unit trusts: do active managers add value to investors?
title_short An investigation into South African property unit trusts: do active managers add value to investors?
title_sort investigation into south african property unit trusts do active managers add value to investors
topic Investment Management
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/33011
work_keys_str_mv AT rickenscarl aninvestigationintosouthafricanpropertyunittrustsdoactivemanagersaddvaluetoinvestors
AT rickenscarl investigationintosouthafricanpropertyunittrustsdoactivemanagersaddvaluetoinvestors