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2. Chapter 1The Investment Setting. 3. Why Do Individuals Invest ?. By saving money (instead of spending it), individuals tradeoff present consumption for a larger future consumption. (consumption choice). 4. How Do We Measure the Rate Of Return On An Investment ?. The pure rate of interest is th
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1. Essentials of Investment Analysis and Portfolio Managementby Frank K. Reilly & Keith C. Brown
2. 2 Chapter 1
The Investment Setting
3. 3 Why Do Individuals Invest ? By saving money (instead of spending it), individuals tradeoff present consumption for a larger future consumption.
(consumption choice)
4. 4 How Do We Measure the Rate Of Return On An Investment ? The pure rate of interest is the exchange rate between future consumption and present consumption. Market forces determine this rate.
5. 5 People’s willingness to pay the difference for borrowing today and their desire to receive a surplus on their savings give rise to an interest rate referred to as the pure time value of money. How Do We Measure the Rate Of Return On An Investment ?
6. 6 If the future payment will be diminished in value because of inflation, then the investor will demand an interest rate higher than the pure time value of money to also cover the expected inflation expense. How Do We Measure the Rate Of Return On An Investment ?
7. 7 If the future payment from the investment is not certain (uncertainty), the investor will demand an interest rate that exceeds the pure time value of money plus the inflation rate to provide a risk premium to cover the investment risk.
8. 8 Defining an Investment A current commitment of $ for a period of time in order to derive future payments that will compensate for:
the time the funds are committed
the expected rate of inflation
uncertainty of future flow of funds.
9. 9 A central question in investments:
How investors select investments that will give them their required rate of return.
10. 10 Measures of return and risk We have to know:
Historical rate of return for an individual investment over one period of time
Average historical return for an individual investment over a number of time periods
Average return for a portfolio
11. 11 Measures of Historical Rates of Return Holding Period Return
12. 12
13. 13 Annual Holding Period Return
Annual HPR = HPR 1/n
n = number of years the investment is held
Annual Holding Period Yield
Annual HPY = Annual HPR - 1
14. 14 For instance (page 7)
A two-year HPR=$350/$250=1.4
Annual HPR=1.4 (1/2) =1.1832
Annual HPY=1.1832-1=18.32% (Annual HPY is thus assumed constant for each year)
15. 15 However, if the prior example is for a time period of 6 months, what is the annual HPR?
16. 16 Arithmetic Mean (AM) for an investment over a number of time periods
17. 17 Geometric Mean (GM)
18. 18 HPY for a portfolio The mean historical rate of return for a portfolio is measured as the weighted average of the HPYs for the individual investments.
19. 19 You can also consider the mean historical rate of return of a portfolio as the overall change in value of the original portfolio.
20. 20 Computation example of HPY for a portfolio This table is in the book on page 11. It is also provided in the Investment Templates spreadsheet in an interactive spreadsheet form.
This table is in the book on page 11. It is also provided in the Investment Templates spreadsheet in an interactive spreadsheet form.
21. 21 Expected Rates of Return Risk: uncertainty that an investment will earn its expected rate of return (historical return=realized return)
Point estimate: He/she expects to earns 10% over a year.
22. 22 Computing expected return
23. 23 Probability Distributions Risk-free Investment (perfect certainty)
24. 24 Probability Distributions Risky investment with 3 possible rates of returns
25. 25 Probability Distributions Risky investment with 10 possible rates of return
26. 26 Risk Aversion Most investors will choose the least risky alternative, all else being equal and that they will not accept additional risk unless they are compensated in the form of higher return.
27. 27 Measuring the risk of expected rates of return
28. 28 Standard deviation is the square root of the variance = Measuring the risk of expected rates of return
29. 29 Coefficient of variation (CV) a measure of relative variability that indicates risk per unit of return. Measuring the risk of expected rates of return
30. 30 Measuring the risk of historical rates of return
31. 31 Determinants of required rates of return Time value of money
Expected rate of inflation
Risk involved
32. 32 Required rate of return: the minimum rate of return to compensate for deferring consumption.
33. 33 The components that determine the required rate of return The basic interest rate
Assumes no inflation
Assumes no uncertainty about future cash flows.
Pure time value of money
Influenced by time preference for consumption of income (subjective) and investment opportunities in the economy (objective)
34. 34
35. 35 Real RFR is quite stable over time.
Nominal RFR can be affected by
The relative ease or tightness in the capital markets
Expected rate of inflation
36. 36 Risk Premium We demand a higher return on an investment if we perceive that its uncertainty about expected return is higher.
The increase in required return over the NRFR is called risk premium.
37. 37 The major sources of uncertainty (fundamental risk) Business risk
Financial risk
Liquidity risk
Exchange rate risk
Country risk
38. 38 Business Risk Uncertainty of income flows
Sales or earnings volatility leverage affects the level of business risk.
39. 39 Financial Risk (financial leverage) Uncertainty caused by the use of debt financing.
Borrowing requires fixed payments which must be paid ahead of payments to stockholders.
The use of debt increases uncertainty of stockholder income and causes an increase in the stock’s risk premium.
40. 40 Liquidity Risk Uncertainty is introduced by the secondary market for an investment.
How long will it take to convert an investment into cash?
How certain is the price that will be received?
US T-bills has almost no liquidity risk.
41. 41 Exchange Rate Risk Uncertainty of return is introduced by acquiring securities denominated in a foreign currency.
To measure exchange rate risk:
Use absolute variability of exchange rate relative to a composite exchange rate.
42. 42 Country Risk Political risk is the uncertainty of returns caused by the possibility of a major change in the political or economic environment in a country.
43. 43 Risk Premium Basically,
Risk premium= f (Business Risk, Financial Risk, Liquidity Risk, Exchange Rate Risk, Country Risk)
44. 44
45. 45 Exercises Do Problem 1, 5, 7, 9.
Read Appendix of Chapter 1 (This is extra reading. Of course you need to read the contents of all chapters we discuss!)
46. 46 Fundamental risk comprises business risk, financial risk, liquidity risk, exchange rate risk, and country risk
Systematic risk refers to the portion of an individual asset’s total variance attributable to the variability of the total market portfolio