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

Lecture3 RiskAndReturn

This document discusses risk and return as it relates to investments. It defines that return is what is earned on an investment, including income and capital gains, while risk is the uncertainty that the actual return will differ from the expected return. It also states that higher risk investments have higher potential returns, but an investor cannot minimize risk and maximize returns - it is one or the other. Risk depends on both factors specific to individual investments as well as broader market forces.

Uploaded by

Laurent Kewe
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
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
13 views

Lecture3 RiskAndReturn

This document discusses risk and return as it relates to investments. It defines that return is what is earned on an investment, including income and capital gains, while risk is the uncertainty that the actual return will differ from the expected return. It also states that higher risk investments have higher potential returns, but an investor cannot minimize risk and maximize returns - it is one or the other. Risk depends on both factors specific to individual investments as well as broader market forces.

Uploaded by

Laurent Kewe
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/ 22

Risk and Return

 Return and risk are two dimensions of an


investment
 All investments are made in anticipation of a return
 The realization of the anticipated return is however
uncertain
 Relativity is another dimension where return
and risk are related in some ways
 Risk and returns are directly related
 The higher the risk the higher the potential returns
 You CAN NOT minimize risk AND maximize returns
 It is EITHER ….. OR
November 1, 2023 Lecture3_Risk and Return 1
Risk and Return: RETURNS
 Return is what is earned on an investment
 The sum of [net] income and capital gains
generated by a investment expressed in relative
terms
 There are different views about returns
 Required return is the what is necessary to
induce an individual to make an investment
 It is what an investor requires on an investment
given its risk
 It is the inducement to bear risk associated with an
investment
November 1, 2023 Lecture3_Risk and Return 2
Risk and Return: RETURNS
 Required return depends on:
 What an investor may earn on an alternative
investment (that is free of risk)
 A premium for bearing (the additional) risk(s)
 Expected return is what an investor expects
to earn from a specific investment given its
price, growth potential, etc:
 It is the incentive for accepting risk
 Expected return must be compared with the
required return
November 1, 2023 Lecture3_Risk and Return 3
Risk and Return: RETURNS
 Expected return depends on:
 Individuals expected outcomes
 The probability of the outcomes’ occurrences
 Expected return and actual/realized return are
not synonymous
 Even with rational expectations there is a room for
random error

November 1, 2023 Lecture3_Risk and Return 4


Risk and Return: Example
 We will use the following data to illustrate the
computation of risk and return:

State of the Probability Annual Return (RAsset/S)


Economy (S) (PS) Asset A (RA/S) Asset B(RB/S)

Recession 0.20 -7% 17%


Normal 0.30 12% 7%
Boom 0.50 28% -3%

November 1, 2023 Lecture3_Risk and Return 5


Computing Expected Returns: Example

State of Probability Annual Return PS *RS


the (PS)
Economy Asset A Asset B PS *RS,A PS *RS,B
(S) (RA/S) (RB/S)

Recession 0.20 -7% 17% -0.014 0.034


Normal 0.30 12% 7% 0.036 0.021
Boom 0.50 28% -3% 0.14 -0.015
Summation: Expected Return [E(R)] 0.162 0.04
November 1, 2023 Lecture3_Risk and Return 6
Returns: Some Additional Issues
 The term Holding Period Return (HPR) is often
used for securities
 HPR of a security is the return from holding a
security over a period of time
 For example, the HPR for a stock is the "gain
divided by the pain“ – expressed as:

November 1, 2023 Lecture3_Risk and Return 7


Returns: Some Additional Issues
 For a security held over multiple periods, there
are several ways of calculating average rates
of return:
 Arithmetic Average – by dividing the return
over the multiple periods by the number of
periods
 Geometric Average
 Monetary Weighted Average Return

November 1, 2023 Lecture3_Risk and Return 8


Returns: Some Additional Issues
 Returns are expressed as percent per period
 The standard period is a year. That is, returns
are normally expressed on “per annum” basis
 However, sometimes returns are quoted for periods
other than a year
 There are several ways of annualizing returns
are quoted for periods other than a year
 The Annual Percentage Rate (APR)

APR = Per Period Rate X Number of Periods per Year.

November 1, 2023 Lecture3_Risk and Return 9


Returns: Some Additional Issues
 The Equivalent Annual Return (EAR)

 Where N is the number of Periods per Year


 Of the two, EAR is more economically
meaningful, but APRs are widely quoted
because of their simplicity

November 1, 2023 Lecture3_Risk and Return 10


Returns: Concept Checks
 CONCEPT CHECK 1: Compute the holding period
return for a stock that was bought for Tshs 800 (per
share) and sold for Tshs 780 (per share) with the
investor receiving a dividend of Tshs 15 (per share) in-
between.
 CONCEPT CHECK 2: Suppose you bought a stock for
Tshs 800 and sold it four years latter for Tshs 1,100
while pocketing a total of Tshs 420 cash dividend over
the four year period. Compute:
 The HPR over the period
 The annual return over the period

November 1, 2023 Lecture3_Risk and Return 11


Risk and Return: RISK
 Risk is the UNCERAINTY that the realized
return will not equal the expected return
 The discrepancy can be “positive” or “negative”
 Risk is, however, often viewed negatively
 It is the possibility of loss; the uncertainty that the
anticipated returns will not be achieved
 For some assets the return is known for certain
 There is no risk involved
 One example of such an asset is a T-Bill where the
return is ‘guaranteed’ by the government
November 1, 2023 Lecture3_Risk and Return 12
Risk and Return: RISK
 There are two sources of risk
 The individual asset/investment e.g. the firm’s
business and how it is financed (firm specific risks)
 The market or the economy (market risk)
 Firm specific risks are grouped into business
and financial risk
 Market risk is associated the uncertainty
inherent in the [whole] market or economy
 It is “global” in nature

November 1, 2023 Lecture3_Risk and Return 13


Risk and Return: RISK
 Business Risk is the risk associated with the
nature of the firm’s business (operations)
 One aspect of this is the extent to which firm’s
expenses are fixed
 Financial Risk is associated with the type of
financing used to acquire firm’s assets
 One aspect of this is the extent to which a firm is
financed with fixed obligation sources

November 1, 2023 Lecture3_Risk and Return 14


Risk and Return: RISK
 Firm specific risks can be eliminated by holding
different assets (diversification)
 That is, firm specific risk is diversifiable (it is also
known as UNSYSTEMATIC risk)
 Diversification involves holding a reasonable
number of investments such that:
 Each does not represent a significant proportion of
the whole investment
 The returns of the individual investments are not
perfectly in sync
November 1, 2023 Lecture3_Risk and Return 15
Risk and Return: RISK
 Market risk is associated with the uncertainty
inherent in the [whole] market or economy.
 Market risk is SYSTEMATIC (its effect cuts across
all investments)
 It is therefore NONDIVERSIFIABLE (That is, it is not
reduced by diversification)
 NOTE: Though the term “market risk” is often
used in general, it more specifically relates to
the risk associated with movement in security
prices (especially stock prices)
November 1, 2023 Lecture3_Risk and Return 16
Risk and Return: RISK
 Non-diversifiable or systematic risks include:
 Interest rate risk
 Reinvestment risk – the risk associated with
reinvesting funds generated from an investment
 Purchasing power risk
 Exchange rate risk

November 1, 2023 Lecture3_Risk and Return 17


Risk and Return: RISK
 One measure of risk is the variability of returns
 The standard deviation (SD) is used for this
purpose
 SD is a measure of dispersion around an average
value
 SD emphasizes the extent to which the return
differ from the average or expected return
 Standard deviation mainly measures the
asset’s (or firm’s) specific risk

November 1, 2023 Lecture3_Risk and Return 18


Computing Variability of Returns: Example
 The earlier example is used here to compute δ2
State of Probability Deviation Product of deviations
the (PS) times probabilities
Economy A B {RS,A –E(RA)}2 {RS,B –E(RB)}2
(S) RS,A –E(RA) RS,B –E(RB) *PS *PS

Recession 0.20 -0.232 0.13 0.010765 0.00338


Normal 0.30 -0.042 0.03 0.000529 0.00027
Boom 0.50 0.118 -0.07 0.006962 0.00245

Summation: Variances (δ2) of A and B 0.018256 0.0061


November 1, 2023 Lecture3_Risk and Return 19
Risk and Return: Alternative
 Instead of using scenario analysis to compute
expected return and variance, we can use
historical data
 This is appropriate if:
 we expect the (near) future to be similar to the
(near) past.
 we are reasonably confident that the correlations
between the securities are changing slowly.

November 1, 2023 Lecture3_Risk and Return 20


Risk and Return: RISK
 Variance and standard deviation of expected
return are not the only measures of risk.
 Other measures include range of returns, returns
below expectations, and semi-variance (a measure
that only considers deviations below the mean).
 The use of semi-variance to measure risk implicitly
assume that investors want to minimize the damage
from returns less than some target (or average)
rate.

November 1, 2023 Lecture3_Risk and Return 21


Risk and Return: RISK
 Another measure of risk is the beta coefficient
 A beta coefficient is an index of systematic risk
 It measures the volatility of the investments return
relative to the economy (market) return
 More will be discussed on this in a latter topic

November 1, 2023 Lecture3_Risk and Return 22

You might also like