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FINANCE 10. Risk and expected returns

FINANCE 10. Risk and expected returns. Professor André Farber Solvay Business School Université Libre de Bruxelles Fall 2006. Measuring the risk of an individual asset. La mesure du risque d’un titre dans un portefeuille doit tenir compte de l’impact de la diversification .

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FINANCE 10. Risk and expected returns

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  1. FINANCE10. Risk and expected returns Professor André Farber Solvay Business School Université Libre de Bruxelles Fall 2006

  2. Measuring the risk of an individual asset • La mesure du risque d’un titre dans un portefeuille doit tenir compte de l’impact de la diversification. • L’écart type n’est donc pas la bonne mesure. • Le risque se mesure par la contribution du titre au risque du portefeuille. • Remember: the optimal portfolio is the market portfolio. • The risk of an individual asset is measured by beta. • The definition of beta is: MBA 2006 Risk and return (2)

  3. Beta • Plusieurs interprétations du beta: • (1) Beta mesure la sensibilité de Ripar rapport au marché • (2) Beta is the relative contribution of stock i to the variance of the market portfolio • (3) Beta indicates whether the risk of the portfolio will increase or decrease if the weight of i in the portfolio is slightly modified MBA 2006 Risk and return (2)

  4. Beta as a slope MBA 2006 Risk and return (2)

  5. A measure of systematic risk : beta • Consider the following linear model • RtRealized return on asecurity during period t • Aconstant :areturn that the stock will realize in any period • RMtRealized return on the market as awhole during period t • Ameasure of the response of the return on the security to thereturn on the market • utAreturn specific to the security for period t(idosyncratic returnor unsystematic return)- arandom variable with mean 0 • Partition of yearly return into: • Market related part ßRMt • Company specific part a+ut MBA 2006 Risk and return (2)

  6. Measuring Beta • Data: past returns for the security and for the market • Do linear regression : slope of regression = estimated beta MBA 2006 Risk and return (2)

  7. Beta and the decomposition of the variance • The variance of the market portfolio can be expressed as: • To calculate the contribution of each security to the overall risk, divide each term by the variance of the portfolio MBA 2006 Risk and return (2)

  8. Capital asset pricing model (CAPM) • Sharpe (1964) Lintner (1965) • Assumptions • Perfect capital markets • Homogeneous expectations • Main conclusions: Everyone picks the same optimal portfolio • Main implications: • 1. M is the market portfolio : a market value weighted portfolio of all stocks • 2. The risk of a security is the beta of the security: • Beta measures the sensitivity of the return of an individual security to the return of the market portfolio • The average beta across all securities, weighted by the proportion of each security's market value to that of the market is 1 MBA 2006 Risk and return (2)

  9. Inside beta • Remember the relationship between the correlation coefficient and the covariance: • Beta can be written as: • Two determinants of beta • the correlation of the security return with the market • the volatility of the security relative to the volatility of the market MBA 2006 Risk and return (2)

  10. Properties of beta • Two importants properties of beta to remember • (1) The weighted average beta across all securities is 1 • (2) The beta of a portfolio is the weighted average beta of the securities MBA 2006 Risk and return (2)

  11. Risk premium and beta • 3. The expected return on a security is positively related to its beta • Capital-Asset Pricing Model (CAPM) : • The expected return on a security equals: the risk-free rate plus the excess market return (the market risk premium) times Beta of the security MBA 2006 Risk and return (2)

  12. CAPM - Illustration Expected Return 1 Beta MBA 2006 Risk and return (2)

  13. CAPM - Example • Assume: Risk-free rate = 6% Market risk premium = 8.5% • Beta Expected Return (%) • American Express 1.5 18.75 • BankAmerica 1.4 17.9 • Chrysler 1.4 17.9 • Digital Equipement 1.1 15.35 • Walt Disney 0.9 13.65 • Du Pont 1.0 14.5 • AT&T 0.76 12.46 • General Mills 0.5 10.25 • Gillette 0.6 11.1 • Southern California Edison 0.5 10.25 • Gold Bullion -0.07 5.40 MBA 2006 Risk and return (2)

  14. Pratical implications • Efficient market hypothesis + CAPM: passive investment • Buy index fund • Choose asset allocation MBA 2006 Risk and return (2)

  15. Arbitrage Pricing Model Professeur André Farber

  16. Market Model • Consider one factor model for stock returns: • Rj = realized return on stock j • = expected return on stock j • F = factor – a random variable E(F) = 0 • εj = unexpected return on stock j – a random variable • E(εj) = 0 Mean 0 • cov(εj ,F) = 0 Uncorrelated with common factor • cov(εj ,εk) = 0 Not correlated with other stocks MBA 2006 Risk and return (2)

  17. Diversification • Suppose there exist many stocks with the same βj. • Build a diversified portfolio of such stocks. • The only remaining source of risk is the common factor. MBA 2006 Risk and return (2)

  18. Created riskless portfolio • Combine two diversified portfolio i and j. • Weights: xiand xjwith xi+xj =1 • Return: • Eliminate the impact of common factor  riskless portfolio • Solution: MBA 2006 Risk and return (2)

  19. Equilibrium • No arbitrage condition: • The expected return on a riskless portfolio is equal to the risk-free rate. At equilibrium: MBA 2006 Risk and return (2)

  20. Risk – expected return relation Linear relation between expected return and beta For market portfolio, β= 1 Back to CAPM formula: MBA 2006 Risk and return (2)

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