Chapter 1
1
The Investment
Setting
Chapter 1 The Investment Setting
ZHIQIANG WANG
SCHOOL OF FINANCE
DONGBEI UNIVERSITY OF FINANCE &
ECONOMICS
The Investment Setting 2
1. What is An Investment?
Chapter 1 The Investment Setting
2. Measures of Return and Risk
3. Determinants of Required Rates of Return
4. Relationship between Risk and Return
3
1. What is An Investment?
Why Do Individuals Invest?
Chapter 1 The Investment Setting
Investment Defined
Required Rate of Return
4
Why Do Individuals Invest?
By saving money (instead of spending it), individuals
tradeoff present consumption for a larger future
Chapter 1 The Investment Setting
consumption.
There are three factors to be considered
The time the funds are committed (pure time value of money)
The expected rate of inflation
The uncertainty of the future payments (risk premium)
5
Pure time value of money
The rate of exchange between future
Chapter 1 The Investment Setting
consumption (future dollars) and current
consumption (current dollars) is the pure
rate of interest
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.
Expected rate of inflation 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
Chapter 1 The Investment Setting
value of money to also cover the expected inflation expense.
Risk premium 7
If the future payment from the investment is not certain, the investor will
demand an interest rate that exceeds the pure time value of money plus the
Chapter 1 The Investment Setting
inflation rate to provide a risk premium to cover the investment risk.
8
Investment Defined
An investment is the current commitment of dollars for
Chapter 1 The Investment Setting
a period of time to derive future payments that will
compensate the investor for
The time the funds are committed (pure time value of money)
The expected rate of inflation
The uncertainty of the future payments (risk premium)
The investor is trading a known dollar amount today for
some expected future stream of payments that will be
greater than the current outlay.
Required Rate of Return 9
Pure time value of money
Pure rate of interest
Chapter 1 The Investment Setting
Nominal risk-free rate
Risk premium
Required rate of return, including
Pure time value of money
Expected rate of inflation
Risk premium
2. Measures of Return and Risk10
Chapter 1 The Investment Setting
Measures of historical rates of return
Computing mean historical returns
Computing expected rates of return
Measuring the risk of expected rates of return
Risk measures for historical returns
Measures of historical rates of return 11
Holding period return (HPR)
=Ending value of investment / Beginning value of investment
Chapter 1 The Investment Setting
For example, HPR=$220/$200=1.10
Annual HPR=HPR1/n
Holding period yield(HPY)
HPY=HPR-1
Annual HPY=annual HPR-1
For example
n=2, HPR=$350/$250=1.40, Annual HPR=1.41/2 =1.1832,
Annual HPY=1.1832-1=18.32%
Computing mean historical returns 12
For a single investment
Arithmetic mean(AM): AM=ΣHPYi/n
Geometric mean(GM): GM=(ΠHPRi)1/n -1
Chapter 1 The Investment Setting
For example
AM=(15%+20%-20%)/3=5%
GM=(1.151.20 0.80) 1/3-1=3.353%
Year Beginning Value Ending Value HPRi HPYi
1 100.0 115.0 1.15 0.15
2 115.0 138.0 1.20 0.20
3 138.0 110.4 0.80 -0.20
Computing mean historical returns 13
The difference between AM and GM
GM is considered to be a superior measure of the long-term
Chapter 1 The Investment Setting
mean rate of return because it indicates the compound
annual rate of return based on the ending value of the
investment versus its beginning value.
GM is also referred to as the time-weighted rate of return (TWRR)
AM is biased upward if you attempt to measure an asset’s
long-term performance.
GM will be equal to AM when rates of return are the same
for all years. GM will be lower than AM if the rates of
return vary over the years.
Computation of Holding 14
Period Yield for a Portfolio Exhibit 1.1
The mean historical rate of return for a portfolio of investments is measured as the
weighted average of the HPYs for the individual investments in the portfolio.
Chapter 1 The Investment Setting
# Begin Beginning Ending Ending Market Wtd.
Stock Shares Price Mkt. Value Price Mkt. Value HPR HPY Wt. HPY
A 100,000 $ 10 $ 1,000,000 $ 12 $ 1,200,000 1.20 20% 0.05 0.010
B 200,000 $ 20 $ 4,000,000 $ 21 $ 4,200,000 1.05 5% 0.20 0.010
C 500,000 $ 30 $ 15,000,000 $ 33 $ 16,500,000 1.10 10% 0.75 0.075
Total $ 20,000,000 $ 21,900,000 0.095
$ 21,900,000
HPR = = 1.095
$ 20,000,000
HPY = 1.095-1 = 0.095
= 9.5%
Calculating expected rates of return 15
Uncertainty
There is uncertainty for rate of return on one investment
Random variable
Chapter 1 The Investment Setting
The rate of return on one investment is random
The expected return from an investment
Expected Return=ΣPiRi
For example Economic Conditions Probability Rate of Return
Strong economy, no inflation 0.15 0.20
Weak economy, above AI 0.15 -0.20
No major change in the economy 0.70 0.10
E(R)= 0.150.20+0.15(-0.20)+0.700.10=7%
Risk Aversion 16
The assumption that most
Chapter 1 The Investment Setting
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
Probability Distributions 17
Exhibit 1.2
Risky Investment with 3 Possible Returns
Chapter 1 The Investment Setting
1.00
0.80
0.60
0.40
0.20
0.00
-30% -10% 10% 30%
Measuring the risk of expected rates of return
18
Risk is the uncertainty
Two possible measures of risk (uncertainty)
Variance: σ2 =ΣPi[Ri-E(R)] 2
Chapter 1 The Investment Setting
Standard deviation: σ
For example:σ2 =0.0141, σ =0.11874 (above example)
A relative measure of risk
Coefficient of variation (CV)
CV =Standard Deviation of returns / Expected Rate of Return
For example
Investment A B
Expected return 0.07 0.12
Standard deviation 0.05 0.07
CV 0.71 0.58
Risk measures for historical returns 19
To measure the risk for a series of historical rates of returns, we use the
same measures as for expected returns except that we consider the historical
holding period yields as follows:
Chapter 1 The Investment Setting
n
1
2 [ HPYi E ( HPY )]2
n i 1
2 variance of the series
HPYi holding period yield during period I
E(HPY) expected value of the HPY that is equal to the
arithmetic mean of the series
n the number of observations
3. Determinants of Required Rates of20
Return
Chapter 1 The Investment Setting
The real risk-free rate
Factors influencing the nominal risk-free rate
Risk premium
Risk premium and portfolio theory
Fundamental risk versus systematic risk
Summary of required rate of return
The real risk-free rate 21
Real risk-free rate (RFR)
Pure time value of money
Chapter 1 The Investment Setting
The basic interest rate, with no inflation and no uncertainty
about future flows, Influenced by time preference for
consumption of income and investment opportunities in the
economy
Two factors influence this exchange price
Subjective factor is the time preference of individuals for the
consumption
Objective factor is the set of investment opportunities available
in the economy
A positive relationship exists between the real growth rate in
the economy and the real RFR
Factors influencing the nominal risk-22
free rate
Two other factors influence the nominal RFR
Chapter 1 The Investment Setting
The relative ease or tightness in the capital markets
The expected rate of inflation
Condition in the capital market
Expected rate of inflation
Nominal RFR=(1+real RFR)(1+expected rate of inflation)-1
The common effect
All the factors discussed thus far regarding the required rate of
return affect all investments equally
Risk premium 23
The major fundamental sources
Business risk is the uncertainty of income flows caused by
the nature of a firm’s business
Chapter 1 The Investment Setting
Financial risk is the uncertainty introduced by the method
by which the firm finances its investments
Liquidity risk is the uncertainty introduced by the
secondary market for an investment
Exchange rate risk is the uncertainty of returns to an
investor who acquires securities in a currency different from
his or her own
Country risk, also called political risk, is the uncertainty of
returns caused by the possibility of a major change in the
political or economic environment of a country
Risk premium 24
Total risk
f (business risk,financial risk,liquidity risk, exchange rate
Chapter 1 The Investment Setting
Risk premium=
risk,country risk)
Risk premium and portfolio theory25
Systematic risk and unsystematic risk
systematic risk, measured by an asset’s covariance with the
market portfolio. Beta measures this systematic risk of an
Chapter 1 The Investment Setting
asset.
unsystematic risk, measured by the non-market (unique)
variance which is not related the market portfolio but is due
to unique features
Under some assumptions, the risk premium for an
individual earning asset is a function of the asset’s
systematic risk with the aggregate market portfolio of
risky assets
Risk premium= f (systematic or market risk)
Fundamental risk versus systematic 26
risk
There is generally a significant relationship between the market measure of
Chapter 1 The Investment Setting
risk and fundamental measures of risk
The two measures of risk can be complementary
f
Risk premium= (business risk,financial risk,liquidity risk, exchange rate
risk,country risk)
Risk premium= f (systematic market risk)
Summary required rates of return 27
The overall required rate of return on alternative
investments is determined by three variables
The economy’s real RFR, i.e., the long-run real growth rate
Chapter 1 The Investment Setting
Variables that influence the nominal RFR, which included short-
run ease or tightness in the capital market and the expected rate of
inflation
The risk premium on the investment
Measures and sources of risk
Measures of risk: variance of rates of return, standard deviation of
rates of return, coefficient of variance of rates of return (CV),
covariance of returns with the market portfolio (beta)
Sources of risk: business risk, financial risk, liquidity risk,
exchange rate risk, country risk
4. Relationship between Risk and 28
Return
Chapter 1 The Investment Setting
Movements along the SML
Changes in the slope of the SML
Changes in capital market conditions or expected inflation
Summary of changes in the required rate of return
Relationship Between
Risk and Return 29
Exhibit 1.3
Ra teof Re turn (Expected)
S e curity
Low Ave ra ge High
Chapter 1 The Investment Setting
Ma rke t Line
Ris k Ris k Ris k
The s lope indica te s the
re quire d re turn pe r unit of ris k
RFR
Ris k
(bus ine s s ris k, e tc., or s ys te ma tic ris k-be ta )
Movements Along the SML
30
Expe cte d
Exhibit 1.4
Ra te
S e curity
Chapter 1 The Investment Setting
Ma rke t Line
Move me nts a long the curve
tha t re fle ct cha nge s in the
RFR ris k of the a s s e t
Ris k
(bus ine s s ris k, e tc., or s ys te ma tic ris k-be ta )
Changes in the slope of the SML31
A change in the slope of the SML occurs in response
to a change in the attitudes of investors towards risk
Chapter 1 The Investment Setting
Exhibit 1.5
E(R) Ne w S ML
Rm'
Origina l S ML
Rm
RFR
Ris k
Changes in capital market conditions32
or expected inflation
A shift in the SML reflects a change in
Chapter 1 The Investment Setting
Expected real growth in the economy,
Capital market conditions,
The expected rate of inflation.
Capital Market Conditions, 33
Expected Inflation, and the SML
Exhibit 1.6
Chapter 1 The Investment Setting
Ra te of ReReturn
Expected turn
Ne w S ML
Origina l S ML
RFR'
NRFR´
NRFR
RFR
Ris k
Summary of changes in the required 34
rate of return
The relationship between risk and the required rate of
Chapter 1 The Investment Setting
return for an investment can change in three ways
A movement along the SML is caused by a change in risk
characteristics of a specific investment. This change affects
only the individual investment
A change in the slope of the SML occurs in response to a
change in the attitudes of investors towards risk
A shift in the SML reflects a change in expected real
growth, in market conditions such as ease or tightness of
money, or a change in the rate of inflation. Again, such a
change will affect all investments