Brinson-Fachler Effects
Effects measure the impact of the manager's actions. The following table describes each Brinson-Fachler effect.
Return | Formula | Description |
---|---|---|
Currency | Fund Segment Weight * Fund Currency Return − Index Segment Weight * Index Currency Return | Measures the impact of overweighting or underweighting currency in the portfolio relative to the benchmark. |
Currency Cross Product | Fund Segment Weight * Fund Cross Product Return − Index Segment Weight * Index Cross Product Return | Measures the difference between the portfolio's and the benchmark's currency cross product contributions. |
Allocation | (Fund Segment Base Weight − Benchmark Segment Base Weight) * (Benchmark Segment Local Return − Benchmark Total Local Return) | Measures the effect of overweighting or underweighting the sectors. |
Selection | Benchmark Segment Base Weight * (Fund Segment Local Return − Benchmark Segment Local Return) | Measures the impact of choosing securities within an asset segment that provide different returns from the benchmark. It evaluates the manager's skill in choosing better performing securities than those in the benchmark. |
Interaction | (Fund Segment Base Weight − Benchmark Segment Base Weight) * (Fund Segment Local Return − Benchmark Segment Local Return) | Measures the interaction in the other effects. |
Total Attributed | Currency + Cross Product + Allocation + Selection + Interaction | The value added by active portfolio management. That is, the excess return. It is the sum of the currency, cross product, allocation, selection, and interaction effects. |