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Ross FCF 9ce Chapter 13

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
100 views

Ross FCF 9ce Chapter 13

rosss

Uploaded by

Khalil Ben Jemia
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 58

Chapter 13

Return, Risk, and the Security


Market Line

Prepared by Anne Inglis, CFA

© 2016 McGraw-Hill Education Limited


Key Concepts and Skills
• Know how to calculate expected returns
and standard deviations for individual
securities and portfolios
• Understand the principle of diversification
and the role of correlation
• Understand systematic and unsystematic
risk
• Understand beta as a measure of risk and
the security market line
© 2016 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 13-1
Chapter Outline
• Expected Returns and Variances
• Portfolios
• Announcements, Surprises, and Expected
Returns
• Risk: Systematic and Unsystematic
• Diversification and Portfolio Risk
• Systematic Risk and Beta
• The Security Market Line
• Arbitrage Pricing Theory and Empirical Models
© 2016 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 13-2
LO1
Expected Returns 13.1
• Expected returns are based on the
probabilities of possible outcomes
• In this context, “expected” means average
if the process is repeated many times
• The “expected” return does not even have
to be a possible return
n
E ( R)   pi Ri
i 1

© 2016 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 13-3


LO1
Expected Returns – Example 1
• Suppose you have predicted the following
returns for stocks C and T in three possible
states of nature. What are the expected returns?
• State Probability C T
• Boom 0.3 0.15 0.25
• Normal 0.5 0.10 0.20
• Recession ??? 0.02 0.01
• RC = .3(.15) + .5(.10) + .2(.02) = .099 = 9.9%
• RT = .3(.25) + .5(.20) + .2(.01) = .177 = 17.7%

© 2016 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 13-4


LO1
Expected Returns – Example 1
continued
• This example can also be done in a
spreadsheet
State Probability C T
Boom 0.3 0.15 0.25
Normal 0.5 0.10 0.20
Recession 0.2 0.02 0.01
1.0

Rc = 9.90%
Formula =B$4*C$4+B$5*C$5+B$6*C$6

Rt = 17.70%
Formula =B$4*D$4+B$5*D$5+B$6*D$6
© 2016 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 13-5
LO1
Variance and Standard
Deviation
• Variance and standard deviation still
measure the volatility of returns
• You can use unequal probabilities for the
entire range of possibilities
• Weighted average of squared deviations
n
σ 2   pi ( Ri  E ( R)) 2
i 1

© 2016 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 13-6


LO1 Variance and Standard Deviation – Example 1

• Consider the previous example. What is


the variance and standard deviation for
each stock?
• Stock C
• 2 = .3(.15-.099)2 + .5(.1-.099)2 + .2(.02-
.099)2 = .002029
•  = .045
• Stock T
• 2 = .3(.25-.177)2 + .5(.2-.177)2 + .2(.01-
.177)2 = .007441
•  = .0863 © 2016 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 13-7
LO1
Variance and Standard Deviation –
Example continued
State Probability C T
Boom 0.3 15% 25%
Normal 0.5 10% 20%
Recession 0.2 2% 1%
1.0

Rc = 9.90%
Formula =B$4*C$4+B$5*C$5+B$6*C$6

Rt = 17.70%
Formula =B$4*D$4+B$5*D$5+B$6*D$6

Variance c 0.002029
Formula =B$4*(C$4-B$9)^2+B$5*(C$5-B$9)^2+B$6*(C$6-B$9)^2
Standard Deviation c 0.04504442
Formula =SQRT(B15)

Variance t 0.007441
Formula =B$4*(D$4-B$12)^2+B$5*(D$5-B$12)^2+B$6*(D$6-B$12)^2
Standard Deviation t 0.08626123
Formula =SQRT(B20)

© 2016 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 13-8


LO1
Quick Quiz I
• Consider the following information:
• State Probability ABC, Inc.
• Boom .25 .15
• Normal .50 .08
• Slowdown .15 .04
• Recession .10 -.03
• What is the expected return?
• What is the variance?
• What is the standard deviation?
© 2016 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 13-9
LO1
Portfolios 13.2
• A portfolio is a collection of assets
• An asset’s risk and return is important in
how it affects the risk and return of the
portfolio
• The risk-return trade-off for a portfolio is
measured by the portfolio expected return
and standard deviation, just as with
individual assets

© 2016 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 13-10


LO1
Example: Portfolio Weights
• Suppose you have $15,000 to invest and
you have purchased securities in the
following amounts. What are your portfolio
weights in each security?
• $2000 of ABC •ABC: 2/15 = .133
• $3000 of DEF •DEF: 3/15 = .2
• $4000 of GHI •GHI: 4/15 = .267
• $6000 of JKL •JKL: 6/15 = .4

© 2016 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 13-11


LO1
Portfolio Expected Returns
• The expected return of a portfolio is the weighted
average of the expected returns for each asset in
the portfolio
m
E ( RP )   w j E ( R j )
j 1

• You can also find the expected return by finding


the portfolio return in each possible state and
computing the expected value as we did with
individual securities

© 2016 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 13-12


LO1
Example: Expected Portfolio
Returns
• Consider the portfolio weights computed
previously. If the individual stocks have the
following expected returns, what is the expected
return for the portfolio?
• ABC: 19.65%
• DEF: 8.96%
• GHI: 9.67%
• JKL: 8.13%
• E(RP) = .133(19.65) + .2(8.96) + .267(9.67) +
.4(8.13) = 10.24%

© 2016 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 13-13


LO1
Example: Expected Portfolio
Returns – continued
Expected
Stock Amount Return Weight
ABC 2000 19.65% 0.133333
DEF 3000 8.96% 0.2
GHI 4000 9.67% 0.266667
JKL 6000 8.13% 0.4
15000

Portfolio Expected Return = 10.24%


Formula = C$4 * D$4 + C$5 * D$5 + C$6 * D$6 + C$7 * D$7

© 2016 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 13-14


LO1
Portfolio Variance
• Compute the portfolio return for each state:
RP = w1R1 + w2R2 + … + wmRm
• Compute the expected portfolio return
using the same formula as for an individual
asset
• Compute the portfolio variance and
standard deviation using the same
formulas as for an individual asset

© 2016 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 13-15


LO1
Example: Portfolio Variance
• Consider the following information
• Invest 60% of your money in Asset A
• State Probability A B
• Boom .5 70% 10%
• Bust .5 -20% 30%
• What is the expected return and standard
deviation for each asset?
• What is the expected return and standard
deviation for the portfolio?

© 2016 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 13-16


LO1
Portfolio Variance Example
continued
State Probability A B Portfolio
Weights 60% 40% 100%
Boom 0.5 70 10 46
Bust 0.5 -20 30 0
25 20 23

Standard
Variance Deviation
A 2025 45.00
B 100 10.00
Portfolio 529 23.00

Formulas:
Portfolio Variance =B5*(E5-E7)^2+B6*(E6-E7)^2
Portfolio Standard Dev. =SQRT(C12)

© 2016 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 13-17


LO1
Another Way to Calculate
Portfolio Variance
• Portfolio variance can also be calculated using
the following formula:
 P2  xL2 L2  xU2  U2  2 xL xU CORR L ,U  L U

Assuming that the correlatio n between A and B is - 1.00, we have

 P2  0.6 2  0.2025  0.4 2  0.01  2  0.6  0.4  -1.00 0.45  0.1


 P2  0.0529

© 2016 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 13-18


LO2
Figure 13.1 – Different Correlation
Coefficients

© 2016 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 13-19


LO2
Figure 13.1 – Different Correlation
Coefficients

© 2016 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 13-20


LO2
Figure 13.1 – Different Correlation
Coefficients

© 2016 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 13-21


Figure 13.2 – Graphs of Possible
LO2
Relationships Between Two Stocks

© 2016 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 13-22


LO2
Diversification
• There are benefits to diversification
whenever the correlation between two
stocks is less than perfect (p < 1.0)
• If two stocks are perfectly positively
correlated, then there is simply a risk-
return trade-off between the two securities.

© 2016 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 13-23


LO2
Diversification – Figure 13.4

© 2016 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 13-24


LO2
Terminology
• Feasible set (also called the opportunity
set) – the curve that comprises all of the
possible portfolio combinations
• Efficient set – the portion of the feasible set
that only includes the efficient portfolio
(where the maximum return is achieved for
a given level of risk, or where the minimum
risk is accepted for a given level of return)
• Minimum Variance Portfolio – the possible
portfolio with the least amount of risk
© 2016 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 13-25
LO2
Efficient Frontier – Figure 13.5

13-26
LO1
Quick Quiz II
• Consider the following information
• State Probability X Z
• Boom .25 15% 10%
• Normal .60 10% 9%
• Recession .15 5% 10%
• What is the expected return and standard
deviation for a portfolio with an investment
of $6,000 in asset X and $4,000 in asset
Z?
© 2016 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 13-27
LO2
Expected versus Unexpected
Returns 13.3
• Realized returns are generally not equal to
expected returns
• There is the expected component and the
unexpected component
• At any point in time, the unexpected return can
be either positive or negative
• Over time, the average of the unexpected
component is zero

© 2016 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 13-28


LO2
Announcements and News
• Announcements and news contain both an
expected component and a surprise
component
• It is the surprise component that affects a
stock’s price and therefore its return
• This is very obvious when we watch how
stock prices move when an unexpected
announcement is made or earnings are
different than anticipated
© 2016 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 13-29
LO2
Efficient Markets
• Efficient markets are a result of investors
trading on the unexpected portion of
announcements
• The easier it is to trade on surprises, the
more efficient markets should be
• Efficient markets involve random price
changes because we cannot predict
surprises

© 2016 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 13-30


LO3
Systematic Risk 13.4
• Risk factors that affect a large number of
assets
• Also known as non-diversifiable risk or
market risk
• Includes such things as changes in GDP,
inflation, interest rates, etc.

© 2016 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 13-31


LO3
Unsystematic Risk
• Risk factors that affect a limited number of
assets
• Also known as unique risk and asset-
specific risk
• Includes such things as labor strikes,
shortages, etc.

© 2016 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 13-32


LO3
Returns
• Total Return = expected return +
unexpected return
• Unexpected return = systematic portion +
unsystematic portion
• Therefore, total return can be expressed as
follows:
• Total Return = expected return +
systematic portion + unsystematic portion

© 2016 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 13-33


LO2
Diversification 13.5
• Portfolio diversification is the investment in
several different asset classes or sectors
• Diversification is not just holding a lot of
assets
• For example, if you own 50 internet stocks,
you are not diversified
• However, if you own 50 stocks that span
20 different industries, then you are
diversified
© 2016 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 13-34
LO2
Table 13.8 – Portfolio
Diversification

13-35
LO2
& The Principle of Diversification
LO3

• Diversification can substantially reduce the


variability of returns without an equivalent
reduction in expected returns
• This reduction in risk arises because worse
than expected returns from one asset are
offset by better than expected returns from
another
• However, there is a minimum level of risk
that cannot be diversified away and that is
the systematic portion
© 2016 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 13-36
LO2
&
Figure 13.6 – Portfolio
LO3 Diversification

© 2016 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 13-37


LO3
Diversifiable (Unsystematic) Risk
• The risk that can be eliminated by
combining assets into a portfolio
• Synonymous with unsystematic, unique or
asset-specific risk
• If we hold only one asset, or assets in the
same industry, then we are exposing
ourselves to risk that we could diversify
away
• The market will not compensate investors
for assuming unnecessary risk
© 2016 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 13-38
LO3
Total Risk
• Total risk = systematic risk + unsystematic
risk
• The standard deviation of returns is a
measure of total risk
• For well diversified portfolios, unsystematic
risk is very small
• Consequently, the total risk for a diversified
portfolio is essentially equivalent to the
systematic risk
© 2016 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 13-39
LO3
Systematic Risk Principle 13.6
• There is a reward for bearing risk
• There is not a reward for bearing risk
unnecessarily
• The expected return on a risky asset
depends only on that asset’s systematic
risk since unsystematic risk can be
diversified away

© 2016 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 13-40


LO3
Measuring Systematic Risk
• How do we measure systematic risk?
• We use the beta coefficient to measure
systematic risk
• What does beta tell us?
• A beta of 1 implies the asset has the same
systematic risk as the overall market
• A beta < 1 implies the asset has less
systematic risk than the overall market
• A beta > 1 implies the asset has more
systematic risk than the overall market
© 2016 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 13-41
LO3
Figure 13.7 – High and Low
Betas

© 2016 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 13-42


LO3
Table 13.10 – Beta Coefficients for
Selected Companies
Companies Beta coefficient
Bank of Nova Scotia 0.81
IGM Financial 0.86
Talisman Energy 1.50
Manulife Financial Corp. 1.53
Rogers Communications 0.36
Teck Resources Ltd. 2.77

© 2016 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 13-43


LO3
Total versus Systematic Risk
• Consider the following information:
Standard Deviation Beta
• Security C 20% 1.25
• Security K 30% 0.95
• Which security has more total risk?
• Which security has more systematic risk?
• Which security should have the higher
expected return?

© 2016 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 13-44


LO3
Example: Portfolio Betas
• Consider the previous example with the
following four securities
• Security Weight Beta
• ABC .133 3.69
• DEF .2 0.64
• GHI .267 1.64
• JKL .4 1.79
• What is the portfolio beta?
• .133(3.69) + .2(.64) + .267(1.64) + .4(1.79)
= 1.773
© 2016 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 13-45
LO3
Beta and the Risk Premium 13.7
• Remember that the risk premium =
expected return – risk-free rate
• The higher the beta, the greater the risk
premium should be
• Can we define the relationship between
the risk premium and beta so that we can
estimate the expected return?
• YES!

© 2016 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 13-46


LO4
Figure 13.8A – Portfolio Expected
Returns and Betas

Rf

© 2016 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 13-47


Reward-to-Risk Ratio: Definition
LO4
and Example
• The reward-to-risk ratio is the slope of the
line illustrated in the previous example
• Slope = (E(RA) – Rf) / (A – 0)
• Reward-to-risk ratio for previous example =
(20 – 8) / (1.6 – 0) = 7.5
• What if an asset has a reward-to-risk ratio
of 8 (implying that the asset plots above
the line)?
• What if an asset has a reward-to-risk ratio
of 7 (implying that the asset plots below
the line)?
© 2016 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 13-48
LO4
Market Equilibrium
• In equilibrium, all assets and portfolios
must have the same reward-to-risk ratio
and they all must equal the reward-to-risk
ratio for the market

E ( RA )  R f E ( RM  R f )

A M

© 2016 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 13-49


LO4
Security Market Line
• The security market line (SML) is the
representation of market equilibrium
• The slope of the SML is the reward-to-risk
ratio: (E(RM) – Rf) / M
• But since the beta for the market is
ALWAYS equal to one, the slope can be
rewritten
• Slope = E(RM) – Rf = market risk premium

© 2016 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 13-50


LO4
Figure 13.11 – Security Market
Line

© 2016 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 13-51


LO4
The Capital Asset Pricing Model
(CAPM)
• The capital asset pricing model defines the
relationship between risk and return
• E(RA) = Rf + A(E(RM) – Rf)
• If we know an asset’s systematic risk, we
can use the CAPM to determine its
expected return
• This is true whether we are talking about
financial assets or physical assets

© 2016 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 13-52


LO4
Factors Affecting Expected
Return
• Pure time value of money – measured by
the risk-free rate
• Reward for bearing systematic risk –
measured by the market risk premium
• Amount of systematic risk – measured by
beta

© 2016 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 13-53


LO4
Example - CAPM
• Consider the betas for each of the assets given
earlier. If the risk-free rate is 4.5% and the
market risk premium is 8.5%, what is the
expected return for each?
Security Beta Expected Return
ABC 3.69 4.5 + 3.69(8.5) = 35.865%
DEF .64 4.5 + .64(8.5) = 9.940%
GHI 1.64 4.5 + 1.64(8.5) = 18.440%
JKL 1.79 4.5 + 1.79(8.5) = 19.715%

© 2016 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 13-54


LO1 Arbitrage Pricing Theory (APT) 13.8

• Similar to the CAPM, the APT can handle


multiple factors that the CAPM ignores
• Unexpected return is related to several market
factors
E( R)  RF  E( R1  RF )  1  E( R2  RF )  2  ...  E( RK  RF )   K

© 2016 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 13-55


Quick Quiz
• What is the difference between systematic and
unsystematic risk?
• What type of risk is relevant for determining the
expected return?
• What is the SML? What is the CAPM? What is
the APT?
• Consider an asset with a beta of 1.2, a risk-free
rate of 5% and a market return of 13%.
• What is the reward-to-risk ratio in equilibrium?
• What is the expected return on the asset?

© 2016 McGraw-Hill Education Limited 13-56


Summary 13.9
• There is a reward for bearing risk
• Total risk has two parts: systematic risk and
unsystematic risk
• Unsystematic risk can be eliminated through
diversification
• Systematic risk cannot be eliminated and is
rewarded with a risk premium
• Systematic risk is measured by the beta
• The equation for the SML is the CAPM, and it
determines the equilibrium required return for a
given level of risk 13-57
© 2016 McGraw-Hill Education Limited

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