Chapter-7.-Risk-and-Return
Chapter-7.-Risk-and-Return
1. Expected returns
1. Expected returns
Example
At the beginning of the year, the stock was selling for $37 per share. If you had bought 100 shares, you
would have had a total outlay of $3,700. Suppose that, over the year, the stock paid a dividend of
$1.85 per share. By the end of the year, the value of the stock has risen to $40.33 per share. Calculate:
a. Income of dividends?
b. Capital gains/losses?
c. Total returns?
1. Expected returns
Returns
Example
At the beginning of the year, the stock was selling for $37 per share. If you had bought 100
shares, you would have had a total outlay of $3,700. Suppose that, over the year, the stock paid
a dividend of $1.85 per share. By the end of the year, the value of the stock has risen to $40.33
per share. Calculate:
a. Income of dividends = $1.85 × 100 = $185
b. Capital gains = ($40.33 - $37) × 100 = $333
c. Total returns = $185 + $333 = $518
How much do we get for
each dollar we invest?
1. Expected returns
Returns
Rate of returns
Rate of returns is change in total return during a period of time (Eg: year, month…) divided by
the initial investment (Eg: price at the beginning of the period)
𝐷1 𝑃1 − 𝑃0
𝑅= +
𝑃0 𝑃0
Rate of retuns include dividend yield and capital gains/losses yield
Example
Rate of return of the stock
1.85 40.33 − 37
𝑅= +
37 37
1. Expected returns
Average Returns
Example
You buy a particular stock for $100.
Unfortunately, the fisrst year you own it, it falls
to $50. The second-year you own it, it rises
back to $100, leaving you where you started
(no dividends were paid). What was your
average return on this investment?
A. 0% B. 25%
1. Expected returns
Average Returns
R1 + R 2 + ⋯ + R T
Arithmetic average return =
T
1. Expected returns
Expected Returns
𝐄 𝐑 = (𝐩𝐢 × 𝐑 𝐢 )
𝐢=𝟏
In which:
𝐩𝐢 : Probability of the i(th) situation
𝐑 𝐢 : The rate of returns in the i(th) situation
𝐧: The number of situations
1. Expected returns
Expected Returns
Example: We have two stocks, L and U. There are two states of the economy: a boom and a
recession are equally likely to happen, for a 50–50 chance of each.
Recession 0.5 - 20 % - 10 % 10 % 5%
Boom 0.5 70 % 35 % 30 % 15 %
𝐄 𝑹𝒑 = [𝒘𝐢 × 𝑬 𝐑 𝐢 ]
𝐢=𝟏
In which:
𝒘𝐢 : Portfolio weight (The percentage of a portfolio’s total value that is in a particular asset)
𝑬(𝐑 𝐢 ): Expected returns in the i(th) asset
𝐧: The number of assets
1. Expected returns
Portfolio Expected Returns
Recession 0.6 8% 4% 0%
Boom 0.4 10 % 15 % 20 %
1. Expected returns
Definition of Risk: the possibility that an outcome or investment's actual gains will differ from an
expected outcome
Classification of Risk:
Variance &
Standard deviation
Variance &
Standard deviation
𝐓
𝟏
𝟐
𝝈 = ഥ
× 𝐑𝐭 − 𝐑 𝟐
𝐓−𝟏
𝐭=𝟏
In which:
𝛔𝟐 : Variance of an asset
𝐑 𝒕 : The rate of returns in the i(th) period
ഥ : The average returns
𝐑
𝐓: Time
2. Risk
Measure risk from historical returns
Variance & 𝐓
Standard deviation 𝟏
𝛔= 𝝈𝟐 = ഥ
× 𝐑𝐢 − 𝐑 𝟐
𝐓−𝟏
𝐢=𝟏
In which:
𝛔: Variance of an asset
𝐑 𝒕 : The rate of returns in the i(th) period
ഥ : The average returns
𝐑
𝐓: Time
2. Risk
Measure risk from historical returns
Example: Calculate the variance and standard deviation of stock A which has following historical
returns:
2000 - 20 %
2001 50 %
2002 30 %
2003 10 %
2. Risk Interprete Actual return,
Average return, Variance
Measure risk from historical returns and Standard deviation?
Variance: The average squared difference between the actual return and
the expected return.
Variance &
Standard deviation 𝐧
𝝈𝟐 = {𝒑𝐢 × 𝑹𝒊 − 𝑬 𝐑 𝐢 𝟐}
𝐢=𝟏
In which:
𝐩𝐢 : Probability of the i(th) situation
𝐑 𝐢 : The rate of returns in the i(th) situation
𝐄(𝐑 𝐢 ): The expected returns in the i(th) situation
𝐧: The number of situations
2. Risk
Measure risk from projected future returns
Variance & 𝐧
Standard deviation
𝛔= 𝝈𝟐 = {𝒑𝐢 × 𝑹𝒊 − 𝑬 𝐑 𝐢 𝟐}
𝐢=𝟏
In which:
𝐩𝐢 : Probability of the i(th) situation
𝐑 𝐢 : The rate of returns in the i(th) situation
𝐄(𝐑 𝐢 ): The expected returns in the i(th) situation
𝐧: The number of situations
2. Risk
Measure risk from projected future returns
Recession 0.2 - 20 % 10 %
Boom 0.8 70 % 30 %
Recession 0.2 - 20 % 10 %
Boom 0.8 70 % 30 %
Variance
Measures of risk Individual asset
Standard Deviation
Variance
Correlation coefficient
2. Risk
Other measures of portfolio risk
Covariance is a statistical measure of the directional relationship between two asset prices
𝐧
Correlation coefficient is a statistic that measures the degree to which two securities move in
relation to each other
𝐂𝐨𝒗 𝐑 𝐀 , 𝐑 𝐁
𝐂𝐨𝐫𝐫 𝐑 𝐀 , 𝐑 𝐁 = 𝛒 𝐑 𝐀 , 𝐑 𝐁 =
𝝈(𝑹𝑨 ) × 𝝈(𝑹𝑩 )
Portfolio variance
𝐧 𝒏 𝒏
𝝈𝑷 𝟐 = 𝒑𝐢 × 𝑹𝒊 − 𝑬 𝐑 𝐢 𝟐
= 𝒘𝑨 𝒘𝑩 𝒄𝒐𝒗𝑨,𝑩
𝐢=𝟏 𝒊=𝟏 𝒊=𝟏
In which:
𝐩𝐢 : Probability of the i(th) situation
𝐑 𝐢 : The portfolio returns in the i(th) situation
𝐄(𝐑 𝐢 ): The portfolio expected returns in the i(th) situation
𝐧: The number of portfolio
𝒘𝑨 , 𝒘𝑩 : The weight of asset A in the portfolio, The weight of asset B in the portfolio
𝒄𝒐𝒗𝐴,𝐵 : The covariance between asset A and asset B
2. Risk
Measure risk from projected future returns
Recession 0.2 - 20 % 10 %
Boom 0.8 70 % 30 %
Calculate:
a. The covariance between stock L and stock X
b. The correlation coefficient between stock L and stock X
c. The variance of the portfolio with 2 approaches
2. Risk
Measure risk from projected future returns
𝝈𝑷 𝟐 = 𝒑 𝐢 × 𝑹 𝒊 − 𝑬 𝐑 𝐢 𝟐
= 𝟎. 𝟐 × (−𝟎. 𝟎𝟓 − 𝟎. 𝟑𝟗)𝟐 +𝟎. 𝟖 × (𝟎. 𝟓 − 𝟎. 𝟑𝟗)𝟐 = 𝟎. 𝟎𝟓
𝐢=𝟏
2. Risk
Measure risk from projected future returns
• Principle of diversification
• Systematic risk principle
3. Diversification and
Portfolio risk • Beta coefficient (β)
• Risk premium
• SML