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Chap010new HKC2022-2

This chapter discusses risk and return lessons from market history. It will cover calculating returns on investments, historical returns and risks of different asset classes like stocks, bonds and bills from 1926-present. Key concepts include arithmetic vs geometric average returns, holding period returns, return statistics like means and standard deviations, and the risk-return tradeoff. The chapter aims to understand how returns have varied over time for different investments and implications for investing.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
33 views13 pages

Chap010new HKC2022-2

This chapter discusses risk and return lessons from market history. It will cover calculating returns on investments, historical returns and risks of different asset classes like stocks, bonds and bills from 1926-present. Key concepts include arithmetic vs geometric average returns, holding period returns, return statistics like means and standard deviations, and the risk-return tradeoff. The chapter aims to understand how returns have varied over time for different investments and implications for investing.
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Chapter 10

Risk and Return: Lessons from Market History

 Know how to calculate the return on an investment


 Know how to calculate the standard deviation of an
investment’s returns
 Understand the historical returns and risks on various
types of investments
 Understand the importance of the normal distribution
 Understand the difference between arithmetic and
geometric average returns

Copyright © 2016 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved.


No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education.
10-1

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10.1 Returns
10.2 Holding-Period Returns
10.3 Return Statistics
10.4 Average Stock Returns and Risk-Free Returns
10.5 Risk Statistics
10.6 More on Average Returns
10.7 The U.S. Equity Risk Premium: Historical and
International Perspectives
10.8 2008: A Year of Financial Crisis

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10-2

 Dollar Returns
the sum of the cash received and Dividends
the change in value of the asset,
in dollars.
Ending
market value

Time 0 1
Percentage Returns
–the sum of the cash received and the
Initial change in value of the asset, divided
investment by the initial investment.

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10-3

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Dollar Return = Dividend + Change in Market Value
dollar return
percentage return =
beginning market value

dividend + change in market value


=
beginning market value

= dividend yield + capital gains yield

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10-4

 4

 Suppose you bought 100 shares of XYZ Co. one


year ago today at $45. Over the last year, you
received $27 in dividends (27 cents per share ×
100 shares). At the end of the year, the stock sells
for $48. How did you do?
 You invested $45 × 100 = $4,500. At the end of
the year, you have stock worth $4,800 and cash
dividends of $27. Your dollar gain was $327 = $27
+ ($4,800 – $4,500).
 Your percentage return for the year is:
$327
7.3% =
$4,500
10-5

3
Dollar Return:
$27
$327 gain
$300

Time 0 1
Percentage Return:
$327
-$4,500 7.3% =
$4,500

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10-6

 You bough 10 shares one year ago at $20.


 You have just received $1 dividend per share
and then sold your investment at $21 per
share.
 What is your total dollar return?
 What is dividend yield and capital gain?
 What is total percentage return?

10-7

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 The holding period return is the return that an
investor would get when holding an investment over
a period of T years, when the return during year i is
given as Ri:

Value = $1 (1 + R1 )  (1 + R2 )   (1 + RT )

HPR = (1 + R1 )  (1 + R2 )   (1 + RT ) − 1

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10-8

 Suppose your investment provides the following


returns over a four-year period:

Year Return Your holding period return =


1 10%
= (1+ R1 )  (1+ R2 )  (1+ R3 )  (1+ R4 ) −1
2 -5%
3 20% = (1.10)  (.95)  (1.20)  (1.15) −1
4 15%
= .4421 = 44.21%

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10-9

5
 A famous set of studies dealing with rates of returns on
common stocks, bonds, and Treasury bills was conducted
by Roger Ibbotson and Rex Sinquefield.
 They present year-by-year historical rates of return
starting in 1926 for the following five important types of
financial instruments in the United States:
◦ Large-company Common Stocks
◦ Small-company Common Stocks
◦ Long-term Corporate Bonds
◦ Long-term U.S. Government Bonds
◦ U.S. Treasury Bills
 Which one has highest return? Lowest return?
 What are their spread/dispersion?

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10-10

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 The history of capital market returns can be


summarized by describing the:
◦ average return/mean ( R1 +  + RT )
R=
T
◦ the standard deviation of those returns
(R1 − R) 2 + (R2 − R) 2 +L (RT − R) 2
SD = VAR =
T −1
◦ the frequency distribution of the returns

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10-11

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6
Average Standard
Series Annual Return Deviation Distribution

Large Company Stocks 12.1% 20.1%

Small Company Stocks 16.7 32.1

Long-Term Corporate Bonds 6.4 8.4

Long-Term Government Bonds 6.1 10.0

U.S. Treasury Bills 3.5 3.1

Inflation 3.0 4.1

– 90% 0% + 90%

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10-12

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 The Risk Premium is the added return (over and above the
risk-free rate) resulting from bearing risk.
 One of the most significant observations of stock market data
is the long-run excess of stock return over the risk-free return.
◦ The average excess return from large company common stocks for
the period 1926 through 2014 was:
8.6% = 12.1% – 3.5%
◦ The average excess return from small company common stocks for
the period 1926 through 2014 was:
13.2% = 16.7% – 3.5%
◦ The average excess return from long-term corporate bonds for the
period 1926 through 2014 was:
2.6% = 6.1% – 3.5%
 Sharpe ratio = risk premium/standard deviation
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10-13

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7
 Suppose that The Wall Street Journal announced that
the current rate for one-year Treasury bills is 2%.
 What is the expected return on the market of small-
company stocks?
 Recall that the average excess return on small
company common stocks for the period 1926 through
2014 was 13.2%.
 Given a risk-free rate of 2%, we have an expected
return on the market of small-company stocks of
15.2% = 13.2% + 2%

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10-14

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18%

Small-Company Stocks
16%
Annual Return Average

14%

12% Large-Company Stocks


10%

8%

6%
T-Bonds
4% T-Bills
2%
0% 5% 10% 15% 20% 25% 30% 35%

Annual Return Standard Deviation


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10-15

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8
 There is no universally agreed-upon definition of
risk.
 The measures of risk that we discuss are variance and
standard deviation.
◦ The standard deviation is the standard statistical measure of
the spread of a sample, and it will be the measure we use
most of this time.
◦ Its interpretation is facilitated by a discussion of the normal
distribution.

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10-16

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 A large enough sample drawn from a normal


distribution looks like a bell-shaped curve.
Probability

The probability that a yearly return


will fall within 20.1 percent of the
mean of 12.1 percent will be
approximately 2/3.

– 3s – 2s – 1s 0 + 1s + 2s + 3s
– 48.2% – 28.1% – 8.0% 12.1% 32.2% 52.3% 72.4% Return on
large company common
68.26% stocks
95.44%

99.74%
10-17

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9
 The 20.1% standard deviation we found for large
stock returns from 1926 through 2014 can now be
interpreted in the following way:
◦ If stock returns are approximately normally distributed, the
probability that a yearly return will fall within 20.1 percent
of the mean of 12.1% will be approximately 2/3.

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10-18

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Year Actual Average Deviation from the Squared


Return Return Mean Deviation
1 .15 .105 .045 .002025

2 .09 .105 -.015 .000225

3 .06 .105 -.045 .002025

4 .12 .105 .015 .000225

Totals .00 .0045

Variance = .0045 / (4-1) = .0015 Standard Deviation = .03873

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10-19

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10
 Arithmetic average – return earned in an average period
over multiple periods
 Geometric average – average compound return per period
over multiple periods
 The geometric average will be less than the arithmetic
average unless all the returns are equal.
 Which is better?
◦ The arithmetic average is overly optimistic for long
horizons.
◦ The geometric average is overly pessimistic for short
horizons.

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10-20

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 Recall our earlier example:

Year Return Geometric average return =


1 10% (1+ Rg ) 4 = (1+ R1 )  (1+ R2 )  (1+ R3 )  (1+ R4 )
2 -5%
3 20% Rg = 4 (1.10)  (.95)  (1.20)  (1.15) −1
4 15% = .095844 = 9.58%
So, our investor made an average of 9.58% per year, realizing a
holding period return of 44.21%.
 1.4421 = (1.095844) 4
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10-21

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11
 Note that the geometric average is not the same as the
arithmetic average:

Year Return R1 + R2 + R3 + R4
1 10% Arithmetic average return =
2 -5%
4
3 20% 10% − 5% + 20% +15%
= = 10%
4 15% 4


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10-22

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Arithmetic Geometric

R1... + ...RT Geometric average return =


Ra =
T Rg = T (1 + R1 )  ...  (1 + RT ) − 1

Yearly compounded return Typical year return

( R1 − R) 2 + ( R2 − R) 2 + ( RT − R) 2
SD = VAR =
T −1

Ra  Rg

10-23

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12
 Which of the investments discussed has had the
highest average return and risk premium?
 Which of the investments discussed has had the
highest standard deviation?
 Why is the normal distribution informative?
 What is the difference between arithmetic and
geometric averages?

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10-24

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