Lecture 5
Lecture 5
Lecture 5
Lecture 5
Lecture 1
Key concepts
Bid and ask prices
Market orders and Price-contingent orders
Limit order book
Buying on margin
Short sales
Margin requirements
Understand margin
Be able to determine the conditions of a margin
call
Lecture 2
Key concepts
Different types of investment companies
Mutual funds, close-end funds, open-end funds
ETF
Relevant measures
NAV
Premium/discount to NAV
Fee structure of mutual funds
Return and turnover ratio of mutual funds
Lecture 3
Key concepts
HPR
Expected return and standard deviation of
returns
Scenario analysis method
Historical data method
Risk premium and Sharpe ratio
Asset allocation between risky and risk-
free assets
Be able to determine investment opportunities
with these two assets
Be able to draw CAL and use it
Lecture 4
Key concepts
Market risk, firm specific risk, and beta
Diversification and correlation of returns
Efficient frontier
Portfolio theory
Optimal risky portfolio P forming CAL with the highest
Sharpe ratio
Everyone invests in P, regardless of their degree of
risk aversion
Be able to calculate the expected return and standard
deviation of a portfolio with two securities
Be able to calculate portfolio beta
Be able to determine minimum-variance and optimal
risky portfolios with two risky assets.
CAPM - Assumptions
Individual investors Information is
are price takers costless and
Single-period available to all
investment horizon investors
Investments are Investors are
limited to traded rational mean-
financial assets variance optimizers
No taxes and There are
transaction costs homogeneous
expectations
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CML
M
E(rM) Efficient
Frontier
rf
m
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M = Market portfolio
rf = Risk-free rate
E(rM)- rf = Excess return on the market portfolio
E (rM ) rf
M {
=Optimal Market price of risk
=Slope of the CML
Capital Market Line
M = The value weighted “Market”
Market”
E(r)
E(r) Portfolio of all risky assets.
CML
M
E(rM)
rf
→
10
m
SML
E(rM)
(E(rM) – rf )=SML Slope
rf =price of risk for market
ß
ß M = 1.0
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SML: Example
Beta is 1.25 for Stock X and 0.6 for stock Y. Find
the equilibrium expected returns for the stocks,
given the following information:
E(rm) - rf = 0.08, rf = 0.03
Stock X:
E(rx) = 0.03 + 1.25(0.08) = 0.13 or 13%
Stock Y:
E(ry) = 0.03 + 0.6(0.08) = 0.078 or 7.8%
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E(rx)=13% .08
E(rM)=11%
If the CAPM is correct,
E(ry)=7.8%
only β risk matters in
determining the risk
3%
premium for a given
slope of the SML.
ß
.6 1.0 1.25
ßy ßM ßx
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Portfolio Betas
The beta of a portfolio with n securities is equal to the
weighted average of the betas of these securities, i.e.,
n
p w i 1
i i
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Single-Index Model:
Security Characteristic Line (SCL)
With the use of historical data on a
security, market index, and risk-free
rate (typically past 5 year data), obtain
the estimates of αi and βi, and define
SCL as
y i i x
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Dispersion of the
points around the
. . . . Slope =
line measures
.
. . .
unsystematic risk. .
The statistic is
called (e)
. . . . .
. . .. . .
. .
. .
. . . Excess returns
. .. . . .
. . . .. . .
=
on market index
. . .
What should equal to?
.
.. . . . .
Ri = i + ßiRM + ei
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