Lecture 5 PDF
Lecture 5 PDF
Lecture 5 PDF
OF RETURN
1. Understand the meaning and fundamentals of risk,
return, and risk aversion.
2. Describe procedures for assessing and measuring the
risk of a single asset.
3. Discuss the measurement of return and standard
deviation for a portfolio and the concept of correlation.
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. Differentiate between systematic risk and unsystematic
risk.
6. The derivation and role of beta in measuring the relevant
risk of both a security and a portfolio.
7. Explain the capital asset pricing model (CAPM) and its
relationship to the security market line (SML), and the
major forces causing shifts in the SML.
8. Explain the Efficient Market Hypothesis (EMH) and
recognise some market anomalies.
In the context of business and finance, risk is defined as
the chance of suffering a financial loss.
Assets (real or financial) which have a greater chance of
loss are considered more risky than those with a lower
chance of loss.
Risk may be used interchangeably with the term
uncertainty to refer to the variability of returns
associated with a given asset.
Other types / sources of risk are listed on the following
slide.
Sources of Risk Affecting Financial Managers
and Shareholders
For a Treasury security,what is the required
rate ofreturn?
Required Risk-free
rate of = rate of
return return
Since Treasury securities are
essentially free of default risk, the rate
of return on a Treasury security is
considered the “risk-free” rate of
return.
For a corporate stock or bond,what is the
required rate ofreturn?
Required Risk-free Risk
rate of = rate of + premium
return return
How large of a risk premium should we
require to buy a corporate security?
Investor wants higher return if taking
more risk.
• Expected Return - the return that an investor
expects to earn on an asset, given its price,
growth potential, etc.
rP = wXrX + wYrY
• Portfolio Expected Return is a weighted average
of the expected returns of the investments in
the portfolio, weighted by the proportion of total
funds invested in each.
• Find the expected returns from Asset X and Asset
Y first. Then, find the weights of Asset X and Asset
Y in the portfolio. Sum of weights is 1 (i.e. 100%).
Portfolio Return
• The return of a portfolio is a weighted average
of the returns on the individual assets from which
it is formed.
Example: Portfolio Return
Portfolio Risk (2 AssetsPortfolio)
• Portfolio Standard Deviation
# of Stocks
0
Portfolio Risk:
Adding Assets to a Portfolio
• Many empirical studies found that when an investor
holds 20 to 30 stocks in a portfolio, company-unique risk
is nearly eliminated.
As we know, the market compensates investors
for accepting risk - but only for market risk.
Company-unique risk can and should be diversified
away.
Shares of individual companies will have systematic risk
characteristics which are different from the market
average. Some shares will be more risky and some will
be less risky than the stock market on average. Thus, we
need to be able to measure systematic (market) risk.
Beta
• In the early 1960s, finance researchers (Sharpe,
Treynor, and Lintner) developed an asset pricing
model that measures only the amount of systematic
risk a particular asset has.
• In other words, they noticed that most stocks go down
when interest rates go up, but some go down a whole
lot more. They reasoned that if they could measure
this variability—the systematic risk—then they could
develop a model to price assets using only this risk.
• The unsystematic (company-related) risk is
irrelevant because it could easily be eliminated
simply by diversifying.
Beta
• Beta is a measure of market (systematic) risk.
• Specifically, beta is a measure of how an individual
asset’s returns vary with market returns. It’s a
measure of the “sensitivity” of an individual asset’s
returns to changes in the market.
• To measure the amount of systematic risk an asset
has, they simply regressed the returns for the
“market portfolio”—the portfolio of ALL
assets—against the returns for an individual
asset.
• The slope (gradient) of the regression line is the
asset’s beta.
Beta: Market’s Beta is1
• A firm that has a beta = 1 has average market risk.
The stock is no more or less volatile than the
market.
P = wXX + wYY
Example: Portfolio Beta
Hughes has RM40,000 invested in a stock which has a
beta of 0.7 and RM20,000 invested in a stock with a beta
of 2.8. If these are the only two investments in her
portfolio, what is her portfolio’s beta?
Solution:
Portfolio Beta
= RM40,000/RM60,000 * 0.7 + RM20,000/RM60,000 * 2.8
= 1.40
Summary:
• We know how to measure risk, using standard
deviation for overall risk and beta for market risk.
• We know how to reduce overall risk to only
market risk through diversification.
• We need to know how to price risk so we will
know how much extra return we should require
for accepting extra risk.
Capital Asset PricingModel
• CAPM concerns how systematic risk is measured. By
using Security Market Line (SML), CAPM relates the
required rate of return of an asset to its systematic
risk as captured by beta. The equation basically tells us
that for a given asset, investors should be compensated
with a risk-free rate of return plus a risk premium. SML will
be upward sloping because market portfolio return is
usually and theoretically higher than risk-free rate of return.
As a result, assets with high beta will have higher required
rate of return, and assets with low beta will have lower
required rate of return. Investors will not require risk
premium for unsystematic risks because these can be
diversified away by holding a wide portfolio of investments.
CAPM Assumptions
• All investors are price takers. All assets can be sold
at going concern prices (cost of insolvency is zero).
• All investors have the same time horizon.
• All investors have the same information and interpret
it in the same manner (homogeneous expectations).
• Markets are "perfect." i.e. no transaction costs, no
taxes, short selling is allowed etc.
• All investors are risk averse.
• The market portfolio exists.
Required Risk-free Risk
rate of = rate of + premium
return return
market company-
risk unique risk
can be diversified
away
Require d
security
rate of
return
marke t
line
12% . (SML)
Risk-fre e
rate of
return
(6%)
1 Beta
This linear relationship
between risk and required
return is known as the
Capital Asset Pricing Model
(CAPM).
The CAPMEquation:
% of Port A Port B
Portfolio Return Return
0.2 15% 8%
0.6 20% 24%
0.2 30% 40%
Wt. Portfolio A Portfolio B
Return Exp Return Return Exp Return
0.2 15% 3% 8% 1.6%
0.6 20% 12% 24% 14.4%
0.2 30% 6% 40% 8%
21% 24%
Portfolio B has a higher expected return.
Semi-Strong Form
(All publicly available information)
Weak Form
(Information contained
in past prices)
Information and PriceMovements
• In an efficient capital market, prices reflect all
available information.
• When new information arrives, prices react
instantaneously to it.
• Since new information is that which cannot be
predicted, it would arrive at random points in time.
• Price movements are random (i.e. cannot be
predicted).
Implication of Efficiency for Investors
• Future market prices cannot be predicted based on
available information.
• Investments in these markets on average have a
zero NPV.
• The expected rate of return equals the required rate of
return.
• The expected rate of return compensates the investor for the
risk borne.
• Abnormally high returns are earned by pure “chance”.
No group of investors should be able to consistently
beat the market using a common investment strategy.
Implication of Efficiency for Finance
Managers
• Finance managers only need to concentrate on
maximizing net present value of investments in order to
maximize the wealth of shareholders. They do not need
to worry the effect of financial results in published
accounts on share prices because investors will make
allowance for low profits or dividends in current year if
higher profits or dividends are expected in the future.
• Finance managers will not be able to misled investors
by window dressing the accounts and put an optimistic
spin on the figures.
• Finance managers do not need to identify when to
issue new shares because share prices in the market
always reflect the true worth of the company.
Implication of Efficiency for Finance
Managers
• The market will decide what level of return it
requires for the risk involved in making an
investment in the company. It is pointless for the
finance managers to try to change the market view
by issuing different types of financial instruments.
• When a company wishes to expand by takeover,
directors do not need to waste their time to identify
takeover target companies whose shares are
undervalued, since the market will fairly value all
companies’ shares.