Lecture 8 - Risk and Return
Lecture 8 - Risk and Return
Lecture 8 - Risk and Return
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Learning Goals
1. Understand the meaning and fundamentals of risk,
return, and risk preferences.
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2-2
Learning Goals (cont.)
4. Understand the risk and return characteristics of a
portfolio in terms of correlation and diversification, and
the impact of international assets on a portfolio.
5. Review the two types of risk and the derivation and role
of beta in measuring the relevant risk of both a security
and a portfolio.
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Risk and Return Fundamentals
• In most important business decisions there are two key
financial considerations: risk and return.
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Risk and Return Fundamentals (cont.)
• Risk is a measure of the uncertainty surrounding the
return that an investment will earn or, more formally,
the variability of returns associated with a given
asset.
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Risk and Return Fundamentals (cont.)
• The expression for calculating the total rate of return
earned on any asset over period t, rt, is commonly
defined as
• where
rt = actual, expected, or required rate of return during period t
Ct = cash (flow) received from the asset investment in the time period t – 1 to t
Pt = price (value) of asset at time t
Pt – 1 = price (value) of asset at time t – 1
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Example
• At the beginning of the year, Apple stock traded for $90.75
per share, and Wal-Mart was valued at $55.33. During the
year, Apple paid no dividends, but Wal-Mart shareholders
received dividends of $1.09 per share. At the end of the year,
Apple stock was worth $210.73 and Wal-Mart sold for
$52.84.
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Historical Returns on Selected Investments
(1900–2011)
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Risk Preferences
• Economists use three categories to describe how
investors respond to risk.
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Risk of a Single Asset: Risk Assessment (cont.)
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Risk of a Single Asset: Risk Assessment (cont.)
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Risk of a Single Asset: Risk Assessment (cont.)
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Risk of a Single Asset: Risk Measurement
where
rj = return for the jth outcome
Prt = probability of occurrence of the jth outcome
n = number of outcomes considered
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Expected Values of Returns for Assets A and B
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Risk of a Single Asset: Standard Deviation
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The Calculation of the Standard Deviation
of the Returns for Assets A and B
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The Calculation of the Standard Deviation
of the Returns for Assets A and B (cont.)
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Bell-Shaped Curve
Normal Distribution
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Matter of Fact
• All Stocks Are Not Created Equal
– Stocks are riskier than bonds, but are some stocks riskier
than others?
– A recent study examined the historical returns of large
stocks and small stocks and found that the average annual
return on large stocks from 1926-2009 was 11.8%, while
small stocks earned 16.7% per year on average.
– The higher returns on small stocks came with a cost, however.
– The standard deviation of small stock returns was a
whopping 32.8%, whereas the standard deviation on large
stocks was just 20.5%.
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Risk of a Single Asset: Coefficient of Variation
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Risk of a Single Asset: Coefficient of
Variation (cont.)
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Personal Finance Example
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Personal Finance Example (cont.)
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Risk of a Portfolio
• In real-world situations, the risk of any single investment
would not be viewed independently of other assets.
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Portfolio Return & Standard Deviation
• where
wj = proportion of the portfolio’s total dollar
value represented by asset j
rj = return on asset j
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Portfolio Return & Standard Deviation (cont.)
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Expected Return, Expected Value, and Standard
Deviation of Returns for Portfolio XY
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Expected Return, Expected Value, and Standard
Deviation of Returns for Portfolio XY (cont.)
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Risk of a Portfolio: Correlation
• Correlation is a statistical measure of the relationship between any
two series of numbers.
– Positively correlated describes two series that move in the same direction.
– Negatively correlated describes two series that move in opposite directions.
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Risk of a Portfolio: Correlation (cont.)
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Risk of a Portfolio: Diversification
• To reduce overall risk, it is best to diversify by
combining, or adding to the portfolio, assets that have
the lowest possible correlation.
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Risk of a Portfolio: Diversification (cont.)
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Forecasted Returns, Expected Values, and Standard
Deviations for Assets X, Y, and Z and Portfolios XY and XZ
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Risk of a Portfolio: Correlation,
Diversification, Risk, and Return
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Possible Correlations
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The Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM)
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Risk and Return: The CAPM
• The beta coefficient (b) is a relative measure of
nondiversifiable risk. An index of the degree of
movement of an asset’s return in response to a change
in the market return.
– An asset’s historical returns are used in finding the asset’s
beta coefficient.
– The beta coefficient for the entire market equals 1.0. All
other betas are viewed in relation to this value.
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Risk and Return: The CAPM (cont.)
• The beta of a portfolio can be estimated by using the
betas of the individual assets it includes.
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Example: Mario Austino’s Portfolios V and W
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Risk and Return: The CAPM (cont.)
• The betas for the two portfolios, bv and bw, can be
calculated as follows:
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Risk and Return: The CAPM (cont.)
• Using the beta coefficient to measure nondiversifiable
risk, the capital asset pricing model (CAPM) is given in
the following equation:
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Historical Risk Premium
Treasury bills
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Example: CAPM
Benjamin Corporation, a growing computer software
developer, wishes to determine the required return
on asset Z, which has a beta of 1.5. The risk-free
rate of return is 7%; the return on the market
portfolio of assets is 11%. Substituting bZ = 1.5, RF =
7%, and rm = 11% into the CAPM yields a return of:
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Security market line (SML)
• The security market line (SML) is the depiction of the
capital asset pricing model (CAPM) as a graph that
reflects the required return in the marketplace for
each level of nondiversifiable risk (beta).
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Security Market Line (cont.)
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Shifts in the SML
• The security market line (SML) is not stable over
time, and shifts in the SML can result in a
change in required return.
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Inflation Shifts SML
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Risk Aversion Shifts SML
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Risk and Return: The CAPM (cont.)
• The CAPM relies on historical data which means
the betas may or may not actually reflect the
future variability of returns.
– Therefore, the required returns specified by the model
should be used only as rough approximations.