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Chapter 05

Chapter 5 discusses asset pricing theory, focusing on the Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM) and its applications in evaluating portfolio performance. It outlines the assumptions of CAPM, the importance of beta in measuring risk, and introduces multifactor models like Arbitrage Pricing Theory (APT) and the Fama-French model. Additionally, it covers performance evaluation metrics such as alpha, Sharpe ratio, and Treynor index to assess portfolio management effectiveness.

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

Chapter 05

Chapter 5 discusses asset pricing theory, focusing on the Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM) and its applications in evaluating portfolio performance. It outlines the assumptions of CAPM, the importance of beta in measuring risk, and introduces multifactor models like Arbitrage Pricing Theory (APT) and the Fama-French model. Additionally, it covers performance evaluation metrics such as alpha, Sharpe ratio, and Treynor index to assess portfolio management effectiveness.

Uploaded by

sankaranarayan
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
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Investments: Analysis

and Behavior

Chapter 5- Asset Pricing


Theory and Performance
Evaluation
©2008 McGraw-Hill/Irwin
Learning Objectives
 Know the theory and application of the CAPM.
 Learn multifactor pricing models.
 Realize the limitations of asset pricing models.
 Assess the performance of a portfolio.
 Compute alpha, Sharpe, and Treynor measures

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Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM)

 Elegant theory of the relationship between risk


and return
 Used for asset pricing
 Risk evaluation
 Assessing portfolio performance
 William Sharpe won the Nobel Prize in Economics in
1990
 Empirical record is poor

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.

Examine CAPM as an extension to portfolio theory:

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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 )

This leads to the Security Market Line (SML)


5-8
SML:
risk-return trade-off for individual securities
 Individual securities have
 Unsystematic risk
 Volatility due to firm-specific events
 Can be eliminated through diversification
 Also called firm-specific risk and diversifiable risk
 Systematic risk
 Volatility due to the overall stock market
 Since this risk cannot be eliminated through
diversification, this is often called nondiversifiable risk.

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The equation for the SML leads to the CAPM
RM  RF
ER i  R F  COVR i R M 
VAR (R M )
COVR i R M 
R F  R M  R F 
VAR (R M )
R F   i R M  R F 

β is a measure of relative risk


 β = 1 for the overall market.
 β = 2 for a security with twice the systematic risk of

the overall market,


 β = 0.5 for a security with one-half the systematic

risk of the market. 5-11


5-12
Using CAPM
 Expected Return
 Ifthe market is expected to increase 10% and
the risk free rate is 5%, what is the expected
return of assets with beta=1.5, 0.75, and -0.5?
 Beta = 1.5; E(R) = 5% + 1.5  (10% - 5%) = 12.5%
 Beta = 0.75; E(R) = 5% + 0.75  (10% - 5%) =

8.75%
 Beta = -0.5; E(R) = 5% + -0.5  (10% - 5%) = 2.5%

 Finding Undervalued Stocks…(the SML)

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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.

5-16
Market Index variations

Constant 0.001 Constant 0.001


Std Err of Y Est 0.005 Std Err of Y Est 0.005
R Squared 18.67% R Squared 9.94%
No. of Observations 52 No. of Observations 52
Degrees of Freedom 50 Degrees of Freedom 50

Beta estimate 1.19 Beta estimate 0.549


Std Err of Coef. 0.351 Std Err of Coef. 0.233
t-statistic 3.39 t-statistic 2.356 5-17
Interval variations

Constant 0.0001 Constant 0.017


Std Err of Y Est 0.0002 Std Err of Y Est 0.054
R Squared 33.09% R Squared 31.79%
No. of Observations 9090 No. of Observations 36
Degrees of Freedom 9088 Degrees of Freedom 34

Beta estimate 1.039 Beta estimate 1.258


Std Err of Coef. 0.016 Std Err of Coef. 0.316
t-statistic 67.07 t-statistic 3.98
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Problems using Beta

 Which market index?


 Which time intervals?
 Time length of data?
 Non-stationary
 Beta estimates of a company change over time.
 How useful is the beta you estimate now for thinking about the
future?
 Other factors seem to have a stronger empirical
relationship between risk and return than beta
 Not allowed in CAPM theory
 Size and B/M

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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%  1.25%   2.22%   0.14%  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

 SMB, difference in returns of portfolio of small stocks and portfolio


of large stocks
 HML, difference in return between low B/M portfolio and high B/M
portfolio

 Kenneth French keeps a web site where you can obtain


historical values of the Fama-French factors,
mba.tuck.dartmouth.edu/pages/faculty/ken.french/data_library.html

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New Behavioral Approaches

 The design of asset pricing models began using


theories of rational investor behavior.
 Rational investors are generally thought to be risk averse,
can fully exploit all available information, and do not suffer
from psychological biases.
 The expected rate of return on investment for a given
portfolio is solely a function of the economic risks faced.
 Investors do not always act “rational
 Behavioral risk factors like the reluctance to realize losses,
overconfidence, and momentum might be applied to asset
pricing.

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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:

The UMD (up minus down) momentum factor is the


return on a portfolio of the best performing stocks minus
the portfolio return for the worst stocks during the
preceding twelve month period.

Ri  R f ai  b1i ( Rm  R f )  b2i ( SMB)  b3i ( HML)  b4i UMD   i

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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.

 Evaluation of a portfolio’s performance should


therefore include:
 Risk-adjusted performance
 Comparisons with similarly constrained portfolios

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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)

 So, if RF = 5%, βP = 1.2, RM = 11%


 The return should be 12.2% = 5%+ 1.2×(11%-5%)
 If the portfolio earned 13%, then it did well. If it earned
11.5%, it did poorly. Alpha is the difference between
what it did earn and what is should have earned.
αP = RP - RF - βP(RM - RF)
 Positive alphas are good!
 Alpha is an absolute measure of performance.
 What is the source of the non-zero alpha?
 Selectivity: stock picking
 Market timing 5-26
Table 5.2 Beta Estimation for Ten Large Mutual Funds Using the S&P 500 as a Market Index

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%

Data source: http://finance.yahoo.com (2003 data).

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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

 HigherSharpe ratio is better.


 Use as a relative measure.
 Portfolios are ranked by the Sharpe measure.

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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

 HigherTreynor Index is better.


 Use as a relative measure.

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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

 CAPM is an elegant model


 Used extensively in the industry
 You can find a Beta estimate on any financial information website
 Morningstar shows mutual fund risk-adjusted measures
 Used in portfolio evaluation
 However, there are estimation problems
 Doesn’t work very well
 Multifactor models work better
 Portfolios should be evaluated using risk-adjusted
measures and compared with benchmarks of similar
characteristics

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