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Chapter Eight: Portfolio Analysis

The document discusses the efficient set theorem and how it relates to portfolio analysis. It explains that the efficient set is the set of portfolios that offer maximum expected return for a given level of risk, or minimum risk for a given level of expected return. It also discusses the concepts of the feasible set, efficient frontier, optimal portfolio, diversification, and the market model for analyzing individual security returns.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
19 views

Chapter Eight: Portfolio Analysis

The document discusses the efficient set theorem and how it relates to portfolio analysis. It explains that the efficient set is the set of portfolios that offer maximum expected return for a given level of risk, or minimum risk for a given level of expected return. It also discusses the concepts of the feasible set, efficient frontier, optimal portfolio, diversification, and the market model for analyzing individual security returns.
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
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
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CHAPTER EIGHT

PORTFOLIO ANALYSIS

1
THE EFFICIENT SET THEOREM

• THE THEOREM
– An investor will choose his optimal portfolio
from the set of portfolios that offer
• maximum expected returns for varying levels of
risk, and
• minimum risk for varying levels of returns

2
THE EFFICIENT SET THEOREM

• THE FEASIBLE SET


– DEFINITION: represents all portfolios that
could be formed from a group of N securities

3
THE EFFICIENT SET THEOREM

THE FEASIBLE SET


rP

P
0
4
THE EFFICIENT SET THEOREM

• EFFICIENT SET THEOREM APPLIED TO


THE FEASIBLE SET
– Apply the efficient set theorem to the feasible set
• the set of portfolios that meet first conditions of efficient set
theorem must be identified
• consider 2nd condition set offering minimum risk for varying
levels of expected return lies on the “western” boundary
• remember both conditions: “northwest” set meets the
requirements

5
THE EFFICIENT SET THEOREM

• THE EFFICIENT SET


– where the investor plots indifference curves and
chooses the one that is furthest “northwest”
– the point of tangency at point E

6
THE EFFICIENT SET THEOREM
THE OPTIMAL PORTFOLIO

rP

P
0

7
CONCAVITY OF THE EFFICIENT
SET
• WHY IS THE EFFICIENT SET
CONCAVE?
– BOUNDS ON THE LOCATION OF
PORFOLIOS
– EXAMPLE:
• Consider two securities
– Ark Shipping Company
» E(r) = 5%  = 20%
– Gold Jewelry Company
» E(r) = 15%  = 40%

8
CONCAVITY OF THE EFFICIENT
SET

rP
rG=15 G

rA = 5
A
P
A=20 G=40

9
CONCAVITY OF THE EFFICIENT
SET
• ALL POSSIBLE COMBINATIONS RELIE
ON THE WEIGHTS (X1 , X 2)
X2= 1 - X1
Consider 7 weighting combinations

using the formula


N
rP  X
i 1
i ri  X 1 r1  X 2 r2

10
CONCAVITY OF THE EFFICIENT
SET
Portfolio return
A 5
B 6.7
C 8.3
D 10
E 11.7
F 13.3
G 15
11
CONCAVITY OF THE EFFICIENT
SET
• USING THE FORMULA
1/ 2
N N 
P   X i X j ij 
 i 1 j 1 

we can derive the following:

12
CONCAVITY OF THE EFFICIENT
SET
rP P=+1 P=-1
A 5 20 20
B 6.7 10 23.33
C 8.3 0 26.67
D 10 10 30.00
E 11.7 20 33.33
F 13.3 30 36.67
G 15 40 40.00

13
CONCAVITY OF THE EFFICIENT
SET
• UPPER BOUNDS
– lie on a straight line connecting A and G
• i.e. all  must lie on or to the left of the straight line
• which implies that diversification generally leads to
risk reduction

14
CONCAVITY OF THE EFFICIENT
SET
• LOWER BOUNDS
– all lie on two line segments
• one connecting A to the vertical axis
• the other connecting the vertical axis to point G
– any portfolio of A and G cannot plot to the left
of the two line segments
– which implies that any portfolio lies within the
boundary of the triangle

15
CONCAVITY OF THE EFFICIENT
SET

rP
G

lower bound
upper
bound
 P

16
CONCAVITY OF THE EFFICIENT
SET
• ACTUAL LOCATIONS OF THE
PORTFOLIO
– What if correlation coefficient (ij ) is zero?

17
CONCAVITY OF THE EFFICIENT
SET
RESULTS:
B = 17.94%
B = 18.81%
B = 22.36%
B = 27.60%
B = 33.37%
18
CONCAVITY OF THE EFFICIENT
SET
ACTUAL PORTFOLIO LOCATIONS

D F

C

19
CONCAVITY OF THE EFFICIENT
SET
• IMPLICATION:
– If ij < 0 line curves more to left
– If ij = 0 line curves to left
– If ij > 0 line curves less to left

20
CONCAVITY OF THE EFFICIENT
SET
• KEY POINT
– As long as -1 < the portfolio line
curves to the left and the northwest portion is
concave
– i.e. the efficient set is concave

21
THE MARKET MODEL

• A RELATIONSHIP MAY EXIST BETWEEN


A STOCK’S RETURN AN THE MARKET
INDEX RETURN

ri   iI   i1rI   iI
where intercept term
ri = return on security
rI = return on market index I
slope term
 random error term
22
THE MARKET MODEL

• THE RANDOM ERROR TERMS i, I


– shows that the market model cannot explain
perfectly
– the difference between what the actual return
value is and
– what the model expects it to be is attributable to
i, I

23
THE MARKET MODEL

 i, I CAN BE CONSIDERED A RANDOM


VARIABLE
– DISTRIBUTION:
• MEAN = 0

• VARIANCE = i

24
DIVERSIFICATION
• PORTFOLIO RISK
TOTAL SECURITY RISK: i
• has two parts:

    
i
2 2
iI i
2 2
i

where = the
2 market variance of index returns
 iI 2

= the unique variance of security i



returns i
2

25
DIVERSIFICATION

• TOTAL PORTFOLIO RISK


– also has two parts: market and unique
• Market Risk
– diversification leads to an averaging of market risk
• Unique Risk
– as a portfolio becomes more diversified, the smaller will
be its unique risk

26
DIVERSIFICATION
• Unique Risk
– mathematically can be expressed as

2
N
 1 
 2
P     2
i
i 1  N 

1   21   22  ...   2N 


  
N  N 

27

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