35 Real Prop Prob TR J791
35 Real Prop Prob TR J791
35 Real Prop Prob TR J791
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MODERN PORTFOLIO THEORY AND
INTERNATIONAL INVESTMENTS UNDER
THE UNIFORM PRUDENT INVESTOR ACT
Fredric J. Bendremer"
I. INTRODUCTION
II. UNIFORM PRUDENT INVESTOR ACT
III. MODERN PORTFOLIO THEORY
IV. INTERNATIONAL INVESTMENTS
V. CONCLUSION
I. INTRODUCTION
The Uniform Prudent Investor Act (the "UPIA") was approved by the
National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws in 1994
and has been adopted in whole or in part in a majority of the states.'
The United States capital markets now represent only about one-half
of the world's capital markets. International markets thus offer significant
investment opportunities. Because international markets operate
independently of United States markets, albeit to varying degrees,
international markets have the potential to contribute substantially to the
overall performance of an investment portfolio. Participation in interna-
tional markets also can serve as a hedge against declines in the perfor-
mance of United States markets.
The UPIA provides: "A trustee shall invest and manage trust assets as
a prudent investor would, by considering the purposes, terms, distribution
requirements, and other circumstances of the trust. In satisfying this
standard, the trustee shall exercise reasonable care, skill, and caution." 2
The UPIA's prudent investor rule is consistent with section 227 of the
Restatement (Third)of Trusts and is reminiscent of the prudent person or
prudent man rules that have pervaded fiduciary law in many jurisdictions
for years.3 The UPIA, however, defines the prudent investor rule in the
context of authorizing, and in some cases mandating, specific investment
and management practices. Consequently, the UPIA's prudent investor
rule can be significantly different in effect from the prudent person or
prudent man rules.
2 UNIF. PRUDENT INVESTOR ACT § 2(a), 7B U.L.A. 289 (1994) [hereinafter UPIA].
The principles set forth in Section 2 of the UPIA are the "heart of the Act." UPIA § 2 cmt.
Subsections (a), (b), and (c) are modeled on Section 227 of the Restatement (Third) of
Trusts (1992) [hereinafter RESTATEMENT (THIRD)], and on the 1991 Illinois statute, 760 ILL.
COMP. STAT. ANN. 5/5a (2000).
3 "The trustee is under a duty to the beneficiaries to invest and manage the funds of the
trust as a prudent investor would, in light of the purposes, terms, distribution requirements,
and other circumstances of the trust. (a) This standard requires the exercise of reasonable
care, skill, and caution .. " RESTATEMENT (THIRD), supra note 2, § 227. Harvard College
v. Amory, 26 Mass. (9 Pick.) 446 (1830), generally is considered the primordial case in this
area. Therein, the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts stated:
All that can be required of a trustee to invest, is, that he shall conduct himself
faithfully and exercise a sound discretion. He is to observe how men of prudence,
discretion and intelligence manage their own affairs, not in regard to speculation,
but in regard to the permanent disposition of their funds, considering the probable
income, as well as the probable safety of the capital to be invested.
Id. at 461 (footnote omitted).
35 REAL PROPERTY, PROBATE AND TRUST JOURNAL
Another central provision of the UPIA directs that "[a] trustee shall
tion."" Not surprisingly, the fiduciary also must monitor the agent's
activities." Provided the fiduciary complies with the UPIA's delegation
provisions and standards, the fiduciary "is not liable to the beneficiaries or
to the trust for the decisions or actions of the agent."' 3 In addition, by
accepting the delegation, the "agent owes a duty to the trust to exercise
reasonable care to comply with the terms of the delegation."' 4
While for many years trust law and the courts generally have required
fiduciaries to practice diversification, 7 the UPIA codifies the diversifica-
tion requirement and further adopts MPT as the essential underpinning of
18 Noteworthy is the fact that in 1979, the Secretary of Labor issued regulations under
the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 ("ERISA") providing that an ERISA
fiduciary must act as a prudent investment manager under MPT rather than the common law
of trusts. See 29 C.F.R. § 2550.404a-1 (1982); see also Laborers Nat'l Pension Fund v. N.
Trust Quantitative Advisers, 173 F.3d 313, 317-18 (5th Cir. 1999) (stating that MPT is the
correct standard for determining whether a trustee has breached its fiduciary duty with
respect to investment management). The Uniform Principal and Income Act, promulgated
by the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws in 1997, similarly
recogizes the critical role of MPT in the investment and management of trust assets.
See Jeffrey N. Gordon, The Puzzling Persistence of the ConstrainedPrudentMan
Rule, 62 N.Y.U.L. REv. 52, 87 (1987).
20 See In re Younker, 663 N.Y.S.2d 946 (N.Y. Sur. Ct. 1997). The court discussed
New York's historically stringent nondelegation rules, along with their recent relaxation:
Although the law concerning investment powers in New York has continuously
evolved since it was first addressed over 100 years ago, the law regarding
delegation of such powers has not been changed. For many years, delegation was
prohibited by statute unless expressly authorized by the governing instrument.
The legislature altered this long-standing proscription in the recently enacted
Prudent Investor Act, which effects sweeping changes in fiduciary investment
responsibility (citations omitted).
Id. at 948; see also Robert J. Aalberts and Percy S. Poon, The New Prudent Investor Rule
and Modern Portfolio Theory: A New Directionfor Fiduciaries,34 AM. Bus. L.J. 39, 51
(1996) (examining, among other things, the evolution of the prudent investor rule).
21 RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF TRUSTS § 171 (1959).
35 REAL PROPERTY, PROBATE AND TRUST JOURNAL
delegation.22
22 See John H. Langbein, The Uniform PrudentInvestor Act and the Future of Trust
Investing, 81 IOWA L. REV. 641, 651 (1996). In recognition of the difficulties that inhere in
distinguishing between discretionary and ministerial functions, the comments to the
Restatement (Second) ofTrusts included a list of factors that could be of importance to the
analysis. See RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF TRUSTS § 171 cmt. d (1959). The Restatement
(Second) of Trusts was explicit, however, that the power to select investments was
nondelegable. See id. cmt. h. The Restatement (Third) of Trusts, as well as more modem
uniform laws and actual statutes, both federal and state, dramatically expanded trustees'
delegation powers. See RESTATEMENT (THIRD), supra note 2, § 171.
3See Harry Markowitz, Portfolio Selection, 7 J. FIN. 77 (1952).
24 See James Tobin, Liquidity Preference as Behavior Toward Risk, 25 REv. ECON.
STUD. 65 (1958). Other scholars have since further developed and refined MPT. The
capital asset pricing theory represents one such refinement and expansion. See John
Lintner, Security Prices, Risk, and Maximal Gains from Diversification, 20 J. FIN. 587
(1965); John Lintner, The Valuation of Risk Assets and the Selection of Risky Investments
in Stock Portfoliosand Capital Budgets, 47 REV. ECON. & STAT. 13 (1965); William F.
Sharpe, CapitalAsset Prices: A Theory of Market Equilibrium Under Conditionsof Risk,
19 J. FIN. 425 (1964).
25 See generally GORDON J. ALEXANDER ET AL., FUNDAMENTALS OF INVESTMENTS (3d
ed. 2000) (positing that diversification is necessary to realize certain, high returns);
RICHARD A. BREALEY, AN INTRODUCTION TO RISK AND RETURN FROM COMMON STOCKS (2d
ed. 1983) (maintaining that the most effective investment portfolio will balance both passive
and active elements so as to achieve the highest rate of return with the lowest level of risk).
WINTER 2001 Modern Portfolio Theory andInternationalInvestments 799
All fiduciary portfolios do not have the same level of risk tolerance
and investment objectives. Fiduciaries must consider a host of factors in
determining the appropriate parameters of an investment portfolio. The
most fundamental criteria in determining such parameters are the purposes,
terms, and distribution requirements of the trust. Once a fiduciary
determines the appropriate levels of desired return and risk tolerance, the
fiduciary can utilize MPT.
Two of the basic criteria underlying MPT are expected return and
standard deviation of return.26 That investors prefer a higher return and a
lower standard deviation of return is widely understood.27 A portfolio
comprising high expected return assets, however, generally has a high
degree of risk and thus a high standard deviation of return. Accordingly,
such a portfolio is usually imprudent for a fiduciary. By selecting portfolio
components with various rates of return and standard deviations, a
fiduciary can use MPT to match the desired rate of return while reducing
the standard deviation that ordinarily would accompany that rate of return.
Under MPT, two important types of risk associated with a security are
systematic risk and nonsystematic risk.2" Systematic risk involves the
general movements of the market that can have an adverse consequence on
an individual security within that market.29 Nonsystematic risk relates to
the particular risks associated with the issuer of individual securities, such
as poor earnings performance, adverse circumstances in the issuer's
26
See Stanley J. Kon, Modern Portfolio Theory: Implicationsfor Prudent Investment
Strategies, in INTERNATIONAL MUTUAL FUNDS & THE PRUDENT INVESTOR ACT: A GUIDE
FOR THE FIDUCIARY app. at 124 (Federated Investors 1995).
27 See id.
28 See Aalberts & Poon, supra note 20, at 58-59.
29
See id. at 59.
35 REAL PROPERTY, PROBATE AND TRUST JOURNAL
36
See id. app. at 126-27.
37 Conceivably, a fiduciary could employ certain hedging or other sophisticated
financial techniques in connection with a given portfolio. In that case, some investments
may not have either positive historical or projected returns under the then current economic
and financial conditions.
38 See Jeffrey S. Glaser, The Capital Asset PricingModel: Risk Valuation, Judicial
Interlpretation,and Market Bias, 50 Bus. LAW. 687, 696 (1995).
9 See UPIA, supra note 2, § 3.
35 REAL PROPERTY, PROBATE AND TRUST JOURNAL
Indices such as the Dow Jones Industrial Average, the S&P 500, the
NASDAQ Composite, and the Russell 2000 represent equity markets in the
United States.40 Generally, market capitalization determines the securities
represented by a given index, with certain exceptions. 4' A number of
indices represent markets for debt securities in the United States, including
those published by Lehman Brothers and Merrill Lynch.4 2
Well-known indices, such as the FT-SE 100, the Nikkei 225, the DAX-
30, and the CAC40, track particular foreign markets.43 Alternatively, a
fiduciary can analyze foreign markets more generally by using an index
such as the Morgan Stanley Capital International ("MSCI") Europe,
Australia and Far East Index, which represents large capitalization foreign
stocks of developed countries.44 As in the case of the United States,
indices are available for foreign stocks of various market capitalizations in
several markets, ranging from large and small capitalization stocks in
developed countries to emerging market stocks in less developed countries.
The latter includes the MSCI Emerging Markets Free Index.45 Similarly,
indices are available to monitor the performance of foreign debt securities,
such as the Lehman Brothers Global Bond Index.46
Given that United States capital markets represent only about one-half
of the world's capital markets, approximately one-half of the world's
capital markets comprise foreign securities.4 7 While the United States
domestic securities markets have varying risk/return characteristics, as a
general matter, United States market indices are strongly correlated to each
INDExES, AVERAGES, AND INDICATORS (1990) (discussing market evaluators that influence
technical
42 analysts).
See SHILLING, supra note 40, at 644-87.
43 See id. at 261-605.
44 See id. at 630.
4- See id. at 626.
46
See id. at 702.
41 See HAL S. SCOTT & PHILiP A. WELLONS, INTERNATIONAL FINANCE 49 (4th ed.
1997).
WINTER 2001 Modern Portfolio Theory and InternationalInvestments 803
asset is separate and distinct from local market risk. For example, the local
market price could increase while the currency of the asset's denomination
depreciates. Such circumstances could result in a loss even though the
local market price of the asset has appreciated. Dividends and other
distributions also are subject to such risk.
54 Little quantitative data is available on the extent to which fiduciaries are diversifying
through the use of foreign securities. A recent study surveyed 239 Iowa banking institutions
with trust functions about a number of trust management matters, including whether the
institutions' trusts held foreign equity securities or foreign mutual funds. Of those
surveyed, 61 responded. Thirty-nine percent of the respondents indicated that they held
trust funds with foreign equities, and fifty-two percent indicated that they held trust funds
with foreign mutual funds. Nevertheless, in each case, only an extreme minority of trust
funds at such institutions actually held such foreign equities or foreign mutual funds.- For
further discussion of the Iowa study, see Martin D. Begleiter, Does the Prudent Investor
Need the Uniform Prudent InvestorAct-An EmpiricalStudy of Trust Investment Practices,
51 U. ME. L. REV. 27 (1999).
55 See, e.g., UPIA, supra note 2, §§ (2)-(3) (providing that a trustee should evaluate
risk and
56
return objectives and normally should diversify).
See Prefatory Letter from Professor John H. Langbein, Yale Law School, to Eugene
F. Maloney, Esq., Senior Vice President and Corporate Counsel, Federated Investors, dated
December 15, 1995, in INTERNATIONAL MUTUAL FuNDs & THE PRUDENT INVESTOR ACT:
A GUIDE FOR THE FiDucIARY (Federated Investors 1995).
WINTER 2001 Modern Portfolio Theory and InternationalInvestments 805
Under section 2(d) of the UPIA, the fiduciary must make a reasonable
effort to verify facts relevant to the investment and management of trust
assets.57 Thus, a fiduciary utilizing in-house resources for foreign
investments must be certain that those resources are sufficient to meet the
UPIA's standards.5 Many fiduciaries for whom maintaining such in-house
resources is not feasible would take advantage of the delegation provisions
set forth in section 9 of the UPIA.59 Conceivably, such delegation could
apply to the use of an outside investment management firm to manage
foreign investments. However, the use of a mutual fund with foreign
holdings probably is more prevalent.
caution. 61
While the UPIA adopts modem portfolio theory, it does not exculpate
fiduciaries who unduly rely on its theoretical predictions or who fail to
recognize its shortcomings.62 The fiduciary must be cognizant of the fact
that expected returns, correlations, and standard deviations of return are all
based on historical data. Moreover, correlations and standard deviations,
as statistical measurements, are not sufficient to describe the relevant data
completely even if the historical data were invariant in time. Therefore,
reliance on MPT implies a belief that historical data will remain constant
in the future and that correlations and standard deviations are sufficiently
descriptive of that data. The fiduciary must thus be aware that the
predicted results of MPT are qualified in that regard. One also should note
that section 2(c) of the UPIA requires the fiduciary to consider general
economic conditions in connection with the portfolio. 63 Moreover, solely
under an application of the UPIA's prudent investor rule, the fiduciary
should consider a host of other factors when making investment decisions
in the international context."
MPT does not take into account more than expected return, correlation,
and standard deviation of return. Thus, while a theoretically infinite
number of portfolio combinations could produce the same result, in fact,
the risks do not appear identical. The fiduciary must make a judgment,
consistent with the prudent investor rule, on a portfolio combination that
is prudent and reasonable. One may suggest that although the UPIA adopts
MPT, a fiduciary's erring on the side of caution in following MPT's
dictates may in fact be prudent. That is, the fiduciary may wish to utilize
MPT for general guidance but place more weight on qualitative factors
than MPT alone would suggest.
Index to Measure Stockholder Gainsfrom Merger, 6 J. FIN. EcoN. 365 (1978); Stephen A.
Ross, The Arbitrage Theory of CapitalAsset Pricing,13 J.ECON. THEORY 341 (1976). The
UPIA, however, does not embrace any particular variant of MPT or alternative approach to
investment selection and allocation of portfolio components.
65 See EITEMAN ET AL., supra note 48, at 336-38, 371.
35 REAL PROPERTY, PROBATE AND TRUST JOURNAL
have a longer track record than most other markets. Further, the economic,
financial, liquidity, legal, regulatory, and other risks and circumstances of
United States markets have been generally favorable. Under MPT, the
fiduciary could emphasize foreign investments rather than United States
investments while still maintaining a theoretically high level of return and
lower level of risk. Nevertheless, one would still expect fiduciaries to
favor United States investments for both qualitative and quantitative
66
reasons.
V. CONCLUSION
The UPIA adopts MPT as one of the principal bases for diversification.
MPT is an investment strategy, quantitative method, and model by which
a portfolio manager may calculate an optimal allocation among investment
alternatives using expected return, correlation, and standard deviation of
return. The underlying data of MPT are based on historical performance
with the implicit assumption that historical performance reflects future
performance parameters. In theory, an MPT-structured portfolio should
achieve a specified level of return with an optimally minimized standard
deviation of return. Fiduciaries also may utilize MPT to replicate the S&P
500 or another objective performance measurement while lowering the
corresponding risk.