Home / AIMA to beef up its educational program

AIMA to beef up its educational program

(Pictured: Craig Stanford) 

AIMA Australia, the alternative investment managers’ group, is to expand its education committee under new committee chair, Craig Stanford, the head of alternative investments at Ibbotson Associates.

Stanford, who is also an AIMA executive committee member, said last week that the education committee would be looking initially to apply CPD points for advisors and others as part of its education and events program.

  • He said the education committee had three main aims: to help manager members understand what they needed to do to grow their businesses, such as ways to improve transparency and their investment structures; to help investors to understand alternatives and how they can be applied to enhance portfolio returns and/or reduce risk; and, to improve the public perception of alternatives by providing actual examples of investor experiences.

    With respect to public perceptions, he said: “We have to get them to understand these are not the sort of guys who put everything on black and see what happens.”

    The current education committee of four would be expanded, he said, to help meet the committee’s aims.

    As well as advising Ibbotson Associates clients on their alternatives programs, Stanford oversees the $400 million of alternatives which the firm has in its $4 billion implemented consulting funds. Ibbotson is part of the Morningstar group.

    AIMA’s major education event, which is open to all industry participants, is its annual conference, to be held next in Sydney on September 15.

    Michael Gallagher, AIMA Australia general manager, said education had always been a core AIMA offering and he was looking forward to working with Stanford to improve clarity and understanding of hedge funds in the market.

    Investor Strategy News




    Print Article

    Related
    How to find hedge funds investing in ‘dynamism and change’: Panel

    There’s around 15,000 hedge funds in the world – but how many of them are really hedge funds? When you’re looking for non- or less-correlated returns, it might pay to stay away from a long bias.

    Lachlan Maddock | 27th Nov 2024 | More
    Optimising portfolio returns with new investing models

    Since the emergence of “Modern Portfolio Theory” and the “Capital Asset Pricing Model” in the late 1960s, institutional investors have taken a quantitatively driven approach to portfolio construction, looking to create portfolio diversification and obtain better risk-adjusted returns by balancing their asset-class exposures. This journey has seen several important advancements in thinking about how to optimally achieve desired results.

    Staff Writer | 22nd Nov 2024 | More
    For total portfolio approach to succeed, funds need more than good intentions

    Funds that want to take the total portfolio approach first need to get the total portfolio view. To do that they not only need data – and lots of it – but a rock-solid understanding of exactly how they’re going to use it.

    Lachlan Maddock | 22nd Nov 2024 | More
    Popular