Required Return For IPS Statement

rellison

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Quick two-parter:
1) Do you always exclude the house that has been paid off from investable assets because it’s where they are living so it’s not investable, or do you only exclude the house when it is being donated to charity upon death? Every problem I’ve done excludes the house, but then at the bottom says “the house will be donated to charity.”
2) Is there a template or algorithm for this, cause it takes me forever to do these return calculations. 8 minutes is not enough time! Do you write “Cash Flows” first on the test, then calculate cash flows, then “Investable Assets” and calculate those?
Sometimes you add/multiply rates to get the required return; other times you divide one number by another. All in all, it takes me at least 10 minutes to scan the problem, throw out the red herrings, and construct the problem.
 
it’s a PITA, no short cuts.
Generally a house is excluded from the investable asset base but it should be noted in the IPS.
 
A house is not an investable asset because it doesn’t have liquidity.
Return is basically all your (expenses) divided by your (investable asset - 1 time upcoming purchases)
that’ your real return. and you add inflation = BAM DONE
< 8 minutes. :D
I find it helpful to make columns of expense/assets/etc and as you read list them in the appropriate columns.
 
Wait so your formula is:
Real Return=Expenses/(Investable Assets - Upcoming Purchases)?
Will that do it most of the time?
 
well that’s pretty broad because every problem throws in a little curve ball sometimes. but if you go back to the reading and problems do them again you’ll get a better idea of what is an expense and etc. make those tables and you should see a pattern.
 
sometimes they’ll give you a terminal value (say leave $5,000,000 to start a charitable foundation upon death, expected in 25 years). Then it becomes an IRR questions where expenses are the PMT.
 
The general formula above is okay for return required for the next year or something, but other times they might give you a desired future value and contributions being made every year into the current portfolio, then it becomes an IRR problem.
 
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