Hi David
27.3. An equity-neutral hedge fund manager conducts a pair trade. On January 1st, she decides that Company A trading at $18.00 is undervalued, while Company B trading at $24.00 is overvalued. She takes a long position in 10,000 shares of Company A and a offsetting short position in 7,500 borrowed shares of Company B. During the interim three months, each Company pays $1.00 dividend per share. Three months later on April 1st (0.25 years), both shares converge to trade at $20.00, validating her thesis, and she reverses the trade. There is a total cost of $2,000 for all transactions ($1,000 on Jan 1st and $1,000 on April 1st) plus margin costs of $900 for the short sale; i.e., short sale $180,000 * 50% margin * 4.0% * 0.25 years. Which is nearest to the annualized return on the trade?
a. 38%
b. 60%
c. 85%
d. 110%
In the answer to this question, the denominator used to calculate the reture is 180,000. Dont understand this. Shouldnt the denominator just be the margin of 50% i.e. 90,000
Thanks
27.3. An equity-neutral hedge fund manager conducts a pair trade. On January 1st, she decides that Company A trading at $18.00 is undervalued, while Company B trading at $24.00 is overvalued. She takes a long position in 10,000 shares of Company A and a offsetting short position in 7,500 borrowed shares of Company B. During the interim three months, each Company pays $1.00 dividend per share. Three months later on April 1st (0.25 years), both shares converge to trade at $20.00, validating her thesis, and she reverses the trade. There is a total cost of $2,000 for all transactions ($1,000 on Jan 1st and $1,000 on April 1st) plus margin costs of $900 for the short sale; i.e., short sale $180,000 * 50% margin * 4.0% * 0.25 years. Which is nearest to the annualized return on the trade?
a. 38%
b. 60%
c. 85%
d. 110%
In the answer to this question, the denominator used to calculate the reture is 180,000. Dont understand this. Shouldnt the denominator just be the margin of 50% i.e. 90,000
Thanks