I'm curious...
How exactly does a fund or adviser provide monthly performance data "NET OF FEES", when fees are charged quarterly? All funds are required to provide this data in a monthly and YTD format, yet the industry standard seems to be quarterly performance fees.
Assume a 20% quarterly performance fee and no administrative fees.
Example Returns
Jan +2%
Feb +10%
Mar +5%
So +17.81% for the quarter before fees and 14.25% after fees. Which of the following monthly reports is correct, net of fees?
#1
Jan +2%
Feb +10%
Mar +1.82%
or
#2
Jan +0.81%
Feb +8.81%
Mar +3.81%
or
#3
Jan +1.614%
Feb +8.07%
Mar +4.035%
In #1 the fees are applied only to the final month, which I'm certain isn't correct. #2 the fees are divided evenly across each month, which is inaccurate but could be correct. And #3 is the most accurate and is essentially creating a compound monthly growth rate so that when compounded the three numbers would equal the realized return.
Thanks guys.
How exactly does a fund or adviser provide monthly performance data "NET OF FEES", when fees are charged quarterly? All funds are required to provide this data in a monthly and YTD format, yet the industry standard seems to be quarterly performance fees.
Assume a 20% quarterly performance fee and no administrative fees.
Example Returns
Jan +2%
Feb +10%
Mar +5%
So +17.81% for the quarter before fees and 14.25% after fees. Which of the following monthly reports is correct, net of fees?
#1
Jan +2%
Feb +10%
Mar +1.82%
or
#2
Jan +0.81%
Feb +8.81%
Mar +3.81%
or
#3
Jan +1.614%
Feb +8.07%
Mar +4.035%
In #1 the fees are applied only to the final month, which I'm certain isn't correct. #2 the fees are divided evenly across each month, which is inaccurate but could be correct. And #3 is the most accurate and is essentially creating a compound monthly growth rate so that when compounded the three numbers would equal the realized return.
Thanks guys.
