In this example, the investment product is chosen based on investment horizon, which is different from foundation’s life. Please help elaborate the basis of using CF.
Is it a general concept that investment horizon is always half of foundation’s life if contributions and spends are spread over the life cycle. Is it a strict formula (also in practice) applied for this case? I’d think many foundations have similar cash flow patterns. Why isn’t it applied for DB for example?
Please confirm for the sake of my calculation: is it 10 years/2 = 5 investment horizon given foundation’s life=10 years? Could you point out the relevant concept/theory reading? If the only contribution is at the beginning of the period, will investment horizon be 10 years? Thanks!
Example 12, Reading 14, Curriculum L3 jun 15
Is it a general concept that investment horizon is always half of foundation’s life if contributions and spends are spread over the life cycle. Is it a strict formula (also in practice) applied for this case? I’d think many foundations have similar cash flow patterns. Why isn’t it applied for DB for example?
Please confirm for the sake of my calculation: is it 10 years/2 = 5 investment horizon given foundation’s life=10 years? Could you point out the relevant concept/theory reading? If the only contribution is at the beginning of the period, will investment horizon be 10 years? Thanks!
Example 12, Reading 14, Curriculum L3 jun 15