Chapter 05
Chapter 05
and Behavior
5-2
Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM)
5-3
CAPM Basic Assumptions
Investors hold efficient portfolios—higher expected
returns involve higher risk.
Unlimited borrowing and lending is possible at the
risk-free rate.
Investors have homogenous expectations.
There is a one-period time horizon.
Investments are infinitely divisible.
No taxes or transaction costs exist.
Inflation is fully anticipated.
Capital markets are in equilibrium.
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5-5
5-6
5-7
The Equation of the CML is:
Y = b + mX
E ( RM ) R F
E R P R F SD ( R P )
SD ( RM )
rearranging gives
SD ( R P )
RF E ( R M ) R F
SD ( RM )
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5-10
The equation for the SML leads to the CAPM
RM RF
ER i R F COVR i R M
VAR (R M )
COVR i R M
R F R M R F
VAR (R M )
R F i R M R F
8.75%
Beta = -0.5; E(R) = 5% + -0.5 (10% - 5%) = 2.5%
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5-14
CAPM and Portfolios
How does adding a stock to an existing portfolio
change the risk of the portfolio?
Standard Deviation as risk
Correlation of new stock to every other stock
Beta
Simple weighted average: n
P wi i
i 1
Existing portfolio has a beta of 1.1
New stock has a beta of 1.5.
The new portfolio would consist of 90% of the old portfolio
and 10% of the new stock
New portfolio’s beta would be 1.14 (=0.9×1.1 + 0.1×1.5)
5-15
Estimating Beta
Need
Riskfree rate data
Market portfolio data
S&P 500, DJIA, NASDAQ, etc.
Stock return data
Interval
Daily, monthly, annual, etc.
Length
One year, five years, ten years, etc.
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Market Index variations
5-19
Multifactor models
Arbitrage Pricing Theory (APT)
Multiple risk factors, one of which may be beta
Ri R f ai b1i F1 b2i F2 bNi FN i
What are these factors, F1, F2, etc.?
Unexpected inflation, risk yield spread, oil prices,…
Example
Specify an APT model with three factors; the CAPM beta (F1),
unexpected inflation (F2), and the risk yield spread (F3).
A company being analyzed has risk factor sensitivities of b1 =
1.2, b2 = -2.2, and b3 = 0.1. The intercept, α, was 3.5%. The risk
premium on the market was 5%, unexpected inflation turned out
to be +2%, and the yield spread is 4%, what risk premium
should the company have earned?
Ri R f 3.5% 1.25% 2.22% 0.14% 5.5%
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Multifactor models
Fama-French Three Factor Model
Beta, size, and B/M
Ri R f ai b1i ( Rm R f ) b2i ( SMB ) b3i ( HML ) i
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New Behavioral Approaches
5-22
Add a momentum factor…
Those that follow behavioral finance might
argue that the SMB factor is actually a
Overreaction risk factor.
Also add a momentum factor:
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Evaluating Portfolio Performance
How well did a portfolio manager do?
Different portfolios take different levels of risk.
There they should earn different returns.
Some managers have constraints
Must invest in small cap stocks or a particular industry.
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Benchmarks
Comparing the portfolio to similar portfolios
Market benchmarks
S&P 500 Index: General market
S&P 100 Index: Large cap
S&P 400 Index: Mid cap
S&P 600 Index: Small cap
Russell 2000
Industry benchmarks
Dow Jones US Technology Index, DJ US Financial, DJ US
Health Care, …
Managed Portfolio benchmarks
Average return of all mutual funds with the same constraints
Small cap, value strategy, international, etc.
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Alpha
Given CAPM, a portfolio should earn the return of:
E(RP) = RF + βP(RM - RF)
Alpha Beta
Mutual Fund Ticker estimate t-statistic estimate t-statistic R sq.
American Century Ultra TWCUX 0.010 0.12 0.977 25.69 92.8%
Fidelity Advisors Growth Opportunity FAGOX 0.023 0.48 1.048 45.86 97.6%
Fidelity Contrafund FCNTX 0.153 1.75 0.717 17.18 85.3%
Fidelity Magellan Fund FMAGX -0.033 -1.05 0.995 66.95 98.9%
Fidelity Puritan FPURX 0.027 0.45 0.614 21.15 89.8%
Investment Co. of America AIVSX 0.050 0.98 0.759 30.82 94.9%
Janus Fund JANSX 0.038 0.37 1.084 22.23 90.7%
Vanguard 500 Index VFINX -0.003 -0.19 1.013 141.42 99.7%
Vanguard Wellington VWELX 0.039 0.61 0.601 19.55 88.2%
Washington Mutual AWSHX -0.025 -0.45 0.907 34.09 95.8%
Averages 0.028 0.307 0.872 42.494 93.4%
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Sharpe Ratio
Reward-to-variability measure
Risk premium earned per unit of total risk:
R P R F Excess return on portfolio P
Sharpe ratio
SD ( R P ) Total Risk for portfolio P
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Treynor Index
Reward-to-volatility measure
Risk premium earned per unit of systematic
risk:
RP RF Excess return on portfolio P
Treynor Index
P Systematic risk for portfolio P
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Example
A pension fund’s average monthly return for the year was 0.9% and the
standard deviation was 0.5%. The fund uses an aggressive strategy as
indicated by its beta of 1.7.
If the market averaged 0.7%, with a standard deviation of 0.3%, how
did the pension fund perform relative to the market?
The monthly risk free rate was 0.2%.
Solution:
Compute and compare the Sharpe and Treynor measures of the fund
and market. R RF 0.9% 0.2%
For the pension fund: Sharpe ratio P 1.4
SD ( RP ) 0 .5 %
R RF 0.9% 0.2%
Treynor Index P 0.41
For the market: P 1.7
0.7% 0.2% 0 .7 % 0 .2 %
Sharpe ratio 1.67 Treynor Index 0.50
0.3% 1 .0
Both the Sharpe ratio and the Treynor Index are greater for the market
than for the mutual fund. Therefore, the mutual fund under-performed
the market. 5-30
Summary
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