CH 02
CH 02
CHAPTER 2
Risk and Return: Part I
n Basic return concepts n Basic risk concepts n Stand-alone risk n Portfolio (market) risk n Risk and return: CAPM/SML
2-2
Investment returns measure the financial results of an investment. Returns may be historical or prospective (anticipated). Returns can be expressed in: l Dollar terms. l Percentage terms.
2-3
What is the return on an investment that costs $1,000 and is sold after 1 year for $1,100?
n
2-4
What is investment risk? Typically, investment returns are not known with certainty. Investment risk pertains to the probability of earning a return less than that expected. The greater the chance of a return far below the expected return, the greater the risk.
2-5
Probability distribution
Stock X
Stock Y
-20
n
1 5
50
2-6
8.0% -22.0% 8.0 8.0 8.0 8.0 -2.0 20.0 35.0 50.0
10.0% -13.0% -10.0 7.0 45.0 30.0 1.0 15.0 29.0 43.0
2-7
The T-bill will return 8% regardless of the state of the economy. Is the T-bill riskless? Explain.
2-8
Do the returns of Alta Inds. and Repo Men move with or counter to the economy?
n Alta Inds. moves with the economy, so it is positively correlated with the economy. This is the typical situation. n Repo Men moves counter to the economy. Such negative correlation is unusual.
2-9
Calculate the expected rate of return on each alternative. ^ = expected rate of r return. n
r =
rP .
i i
i=1
2 - 10
Alta has the highest rate of return. n Does that make it best?
2 - 11
2 - 12
= ri r Pi . i =1
Alta Inds: = ((-22 - 17.4)20.10 + (-2 17.4)20.20 + (20 - 17.4)20.40 + (35 17.4)20.20 + (50 Repo = T-bills = 17.4)20.10)1/2 = 20.0%. 13.4%. 0.0%. = Alta 20.0%. Am Foam = 18.8%.
2 - 13
Prob.
T-bill
Am. F. Alta
13.8
17.4
2 - 14
n Standard deviation measures the stand-alone risk of an investment. n The larger the standard deviation, the higher the probability that returns will be far below the expected return. n Coefficient of variation is an alternative measure of stand-alone risk.
2 - 15
Expected Return versus Risk Security Alta Inds. Market Am. Foam T-bills Repo Men Expected return 17.4% 15.0 13.8 8.0 1.7 Risk, 20.0% 15.3 18.8 0.0 13.4
2 - 16
CVAlta Inds = 20.0%/17.4% CVRepo Men = 13.4%/1.7% CVAm. Foam = 18.8%/13.8% CVM = 15.3%/15.0%
2 - 17
Expected Return versus Coefficient of Variation Expected Security Alta Inds Market Am. Foam T-bills Repo Men return 17.4% 15.0 13.8 8.0 1.7 Risk: 20.0% 15.3 18.8 0.0 13.4 Risk: CV 1.1 1.0 1.4 0.0 7.9
2 - 18
2 - 19
Portfolio Risk and Return Assume a two-stock portfolio with $50,000 in Alta Inds. and $50,000 in Repo Men. Calculate ^ and rp p.
2 - 20
2 - 21
Alternative Method
Estimated Return
Economy Recession Below avg. Average Above avg. Boom Prob. Alta 0.10 -22.0% 0.20 -2.0 0.40 20.0 0.20 35.0 0.10 50.0 Repo 28.0% 14.7 0.0 -10.0 -20.0 Port. 3.0% 6.4 10.0 12.5 15.0
2 - 22
n p = ((3.0 - 9.6)20.10 + (6.4 - 9.6)20.20 + (10.0 - 9.6)20.40 + (12.5 - 9.6)20.20 + (15.0 - 9.6)20.10)1/2 = 3.3%. n p is much lower than: l either stock (20% and 13.4%). l average of Alta and Repo (16.7%). n The portfolio provides average return but much lower risk. The key here is negative correlation.
2 - 23
Two-Stock Portfolios n Two stocks can be combined to form a riskless portfolio if = -1.0. n Risk is not reduced at all if the two stocks have = +1.0. n In general, stocks have 0.65, so risk is lowered but not eliminated. n Investors typically hold many stocks. n What happens when = 0?
2 - 24
What would happen to the risk of an average 1-stock portfolio as more randomly selected stocks were added? n p would decrease because the added
stocks would not be perfectly correlated, but ^ would remain relatively constant. rp
2 - 25 Prob. Large
15
Return
2 - 26
p (%) 35
20
Market Risk
0 10 20 30 40 2,000+
# Stocks in Portfolio
2 - 27
Stand-alone Market Diversifiable = risk + . risk risk Market risk is that part of a securitys stand-alone risk that cannot be eliminated by diversification. Firm-specific, or diversifiable, risk is that part of a securitys stand-alone risk that can be eliminated by diversification.
2 - 28
Conclusions
n
As more stocks are added, each new stock has a smaller risk-reducing impact on the portfolio. p falls very slowly after about 40 stocks are included. The lower limit for p is about 20% = M . By forming well-diversified portfolios, investors can eliminate about half the riskiness of owning a single stock.
2 - 29
Can an investor holding one stock earn a return commensurate with its risk? n No. Rational investors will minimize risk by holding portfolios. n They bear only market risk, so prices and returns reflect this lower risk. n The one-stock investor bears higher (stand-alone) risk, so the return is less than that required by the risk.
2 - 30
How is market risk measured for individual securities? n Market risk, which is relevant for stocks held in well-diversified portfolios, is defined as the contribution of a security to the overall riskiness of the portfolio. n It is measured by a stocks beta coefficient. For stock i, its beta is: bi = (iM i) / M
2 - 31
How are betas calculated? n In addition to measuring a stocks contribution of risk to a portfolio, beta also which measures the stocks volatility relative to the market.
2 - 32
Using a Regression to Estimate Beta n Run a regression with returns on the stock in question plotted on the Y axis and returns on the market portfolio plotted on the X axis. n The slope of the regression line, which measures relative volatility, is defined as the stocks beta coefficient, or b.
2 - 33
Use the historical stock returns to calculate the beta for PQU.
Year 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Market 25.7% 8.0% -11.0% 15.0% 32.5% 13.7% 40.0% 10.0% -10.8% PQU 40.0% -15.0% -15.0% 35.0% 10.0% 30.0% 42.0% -10.0% -25.0%
2 - 34
r KW
E
r 20 % = 0.83r R2 = 0.36 40 %
M
+ 0.03
2 - 35
What is beta for PQU? n The regression line, and hence beta, can be found using a calculator with a regression function or a spreadsheet program. In this example, b = 0.83.
2 - 36
Calculating Beta in Practice n Many analysts use the S&P 500 to find the market return. n Analysts typically use four or five years of monthly returns to establish the regression line. n Some analysts use 52 weeks of weekly returns.
2 - 37
How is beta interpreted? n If b = 1.0, stock has average risk. n If b > 1.0, stock is riskier than average. n If b < 1.0, stock is less risky than average. n Most stocks have betas in the range of 0.5 to 1.5. n Can a stock have a negative beta?
2 - 38
n Go to www.bloomberg.com. n Enter the ticker symbol for a Stock Quote, such as IBM or Dell. n When the quote comes up, look in the section on Fundamentals.
2 - 39
Expected Return versus Market Risk Expected Security return Risk, b HT 17.4% 1.29 Market 15.0 1.00 USR 13.8 0.68 T-bills 8.0 0.00 Collections 1.7 -0.86 n Which of the alternatives is best?
2 - 40
Use the SML to calculate each alternatives required return. n The Security Market Line (SML) is part of the Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM). n SML: ri = rRF + (RPM)bi . ^
2 - 41
rAlta = 8.0% + (7%)(1.29) = 8.0% + 9.0% = 17.0%. rM= 8.0% + (7%)(1.00) = 15.0%. rAm. F. = 8.0% + (7%)(0.68) = 12.8%. rT-bill = 8.0% + (7%)(0.00) = 8.0%. rRepo = 8.0% + (7%)(-0.86) = 2.0%.
2 - 42
r 17.0% Undervalued 15.0 12.8 8.0 2.0 Fairly valued Undervalued Fairly valued Overvalued
Market 15.0
2 - 43
ri (%)
rM = 15 rRF = 8 Repo -1
. .
T-bills
Alta
.
Am. Foam
Market
2 - 44
Calculate beta for a portfolio with 50% Alta and 50% Repo bp= Weighted average = 0.5(bAlta) + 0.5(bRepo) = 0.5(1.29) + 0.5(0.86) = 0.22.
2 - 45
What is the required rate of return on the Alta/Repo portfolio? rp = Weighted average r = 0.5(17%) + 0.5(2%) = 9.5%. Or use SML: rp = rRF + (RPM) bp = 8.0% + 7%(0.22) = 9.5%.
2 - 46
New SML
18 15 11 8 0 0.5 1.0 1.5 2.0
2 - 47
2 - 48
Has the CAPM been completely confirmed or refuted through empirical tests? n No. The statistical tests have problems that make empirical verification or rejection virtually impossible. l Investors required returns are based on future risk, but betas are calculated with historical data. l Investors may be concerned about both stand-alone and market risk.