Understanding the Risk Return Relation

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Instructor: Rogério Mazali Lecture 13: 11/30/
Advertisements

Chapter 11 Notes (Continued).
Chapter 6 Trade-Off Between Risk & Return
Risk and Return Learning Module.
Risk & Return Stand-alone and Portfolio Considerations.
Chapter 8 1.  Based on annual returns from Avg. ReturnStd Dev. Small Stocks17.5%33.1% Large Co. Stocks12.4%20.3% L-T Corp Bonds6.2%8.6% L-T.
Draft lecture – FIN 352 Professor Dow CSU-Northridge March 2012.
Pricing Risk Chapter 10.
Copyright © 2007 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin Return and Risk: The Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM) Chapter.
Principles of Managerial Finance 9th Edition
FINANCE 8. Capital Markets and The Pricing of Risk Professor André Farber Solvay Business School Université Libre de Bruxelles Fall 2007.
Chapter Outline Expected Returns and Variances of a portfolio
Risk and Rates of Return
Chapters 9 & 10 – MBA504 Risk and Returns Return Basics –Holding-Period Returns –Return Statistics Risk Statistics Return and Risk for Individual Securities.
Risk, Return, and Discount Rates Capital Market History The Risk/Return Relation Applications to Corporate Finance.
Diversification and Portfolio Management (Ch. 8)
Risk, Return, and Discount Rates
Efficient Diversification
Portfolio Analysis and Theory
Chapter 5 Risk and Rates of Return © 2005 Thomson/South-Western.
The Capital Asset Pricing Model
Defining and Measuring Risk
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. Chapter 10 Capital Markets and the Pricing of Risk.
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. Chapter 10 Capital Markets and the Pricing of Risk.
Lecture: 4 - Measuring Risk (Return Volatility) I.Uncertain Cash Flows - Risk Adjustment II.We Want a Measure of Risk With the Following Features a. Easy.
Risk, Return, and Discount Rates Capital Market History The Risk/Return Relation Application to Corporate Finance.
Risk, Return, and Discount Rates Capital Market History The Risk/Return Relation Applications to Corporate Finance.
Copyright © 2003 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 5-0 Chapter 5 Risk and Return.
11.1 Expected Returns and Variances
1 Chapter 09 Characterizing Risk and Return McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2012 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Portfolio Theory & Capital Asset Pricing Model
© 2003 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Return, Risk, and the Security Market Line Chapter Thirteen.
AN INTRODUCTION TO PORTFOLIO MANAGEMENT
The Pricing of Risky Financial Assets Risk and Return.
Copyright © 2003 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 5-1 Chapter 5 Risk and Return.
Measuring Returns Converting Dollar Returns to Percentage Returns
Portfolio Management Lecture: 26 Course Code: MBF702.
Thank you Lecture 9: Introduction to Risk and Return - Review
The Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM)
The Pricing Of Risk Understanding the Relation between Risk and Return.
Risks and Rates of Return
Requests for permission to make copies of any part of the work should be mailed to: Thomson/South-Western 5191 Natorp Blvd. Mason, OH Chapter 11.
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Chapter 7 The Pricing of Risky Financial Assets.
CHAPTER 8 Risk and Rates of Return
Lecture 10 The Capital Asset Pricing Model Expectation, variance, standard error (deviation), covariance, and correlation of returns may be based on.
Return and Risk for Capital Market Securities. Rate of Return Concepts Dollar return Number of $ received over a period (one year, say) Sum of cash distributed.
Chapter 7 – Risk, Return and the Security Market Line  Learning Objectives  Calculate Profit and Returns  Convert Holding Period Returns (HPR) to APR.
Chapter 08 Risk and Rate of Return
1 Risk Learning Module. 2 Measures of Risk Risk reflects the chance that the actual return on an investment may be different than the expected return.
Chapter 10 Capital Markets and the Pricing of Risk.
Chapter 10 Capital Markets and the Pricing of Risk
Pricing Risk. Outline Short Class Exercise Measuring risk and return – Expected return and return Variance – Realized versus expected return – Empirical.
The Basics of Risk and Return Corporate Finance Dr. A. DeMaskey.
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. Chapter 5 Risk and Return.
Return and Risk The Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM)
Finance 300 Financial Markets Lecture 3 Fall, 2001© Professor J. Petry
© 2010 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible Web site, in whole or in part.
Slide 1 Risk and Rates of Return Remembering axioms Inflation and rates of return How to measure risk (variance, standard deviation, beta) How to reduce.
Optimal portfolios and index model.  Suppose your portfolio has only 1 stock, how many sources of risk can affect your portfolio? ◦ Uncertainty at the.
1 Estimating Return and Risk Chapter 7 Jones, Investments: Analysis and Management.
Chapter 6 Risk and Rates of Return 2 Chapter 6 Objectives Inflation and rates of return How to measure risk (variance, standard deviation, beta) How.
Chapter 11 Risk and Rates of Return. Defining and Measuring Risk Risk is the chance that an unexpected outcome will occur A probability distribution is.
Last Study Topics 75 Years of Capital Market History Measuring Risk
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. Risk and Return: Capital Market Theory Chapter 8.
Chapter 5 Understanding Risk
Chapter 10 Capital Markets and the Pricing of Risk
Key Concepts and Skills
Risk and Return in Capital Markets
Chapter 11 Risk ad Return in Capital markets.
Return, Risk, and the SML RWJ-Chapter 13.
Presentation transcript:

Understanding the Risk Return Relation The Pricing Of Risk Understanding the Risk Return Relation

Discounting Risky Cash Flows How should the discount rate change in the NPV calculation if the cash flows are not riskless? The question is more easily answered from the “other side.” How must the expected return on an asset change so you will be happy to own it if it is a risky rather than a riskless asset? Risk averse investors will say that to hold a risky asset they require a higher expected return than they require for holding a riskless asset. E(rrisky) = rf + . Note that we now have to start to talk about expected returns since risk has been explicitly introduced. Note also that this captures the two basic “services” investors perform for the economy.

Most agree that expected returns should increase with risk. “E(r) = rf + θ” Risk But, how should risk be measured? at what rate does the line slope up? is the relation linear? Lets look at some simple but important historical evidence.

Returns for Different Types of Securities

Risk, More Formally Many people think intuitively about risk as the possibility of an outcome that is worse than what one expected. Must be incomplete. For those who hold more than one asset, is it the risk of each asset they care about, or the risk of their whole portfolio? A useful construct for thinking rigorously about risk: The “probability distribution.” A list of all possible outcomes and their probabilities. Very importantly we think about the moments of the distribution.

The Empirical Distribution of Annual Returns for U. S The Empirical Distribution of Annual Returns for U.S. Large Stocks (S&P 500), Small Stocks, Corporate Bonds, and Treasury Bills, 1926–2008.

Expected Return Expected (Mean) Return Calculated as a weighted average of the possible returns, where the weights correspond to the probabilities.

Variance and Standard Deviation The expected squared deviation from the mean Standard Deviation The square root of the variance, commonly called volatility in finance Both are measures of the risk or uncertainty associated with a probability distribution

Average Annual Return and Variance Where Rt is the realized return of a security in year t, for the years 1 through T The estimate of the volatility/standard deviation is the square root of the estimate of variance.

History for US Portfolios (1926 – 2008) Average Annual Return Excess Return: Average Return in Excess of T-Bills Return Volatility (Standard Deviation) Small Stocks 20.9% 17.1% 41.5% S&P 500 11.6% 7.7% 20.6% Corporate Bonds 6.6% 2.7% 7.0% Treasury Bonds 3.9% 0.0% 3.1%

Using Past Returns to Predict the Future: Let’s Remind Ourselves of Estimation Error Standard Error of the Estimate of Expected Return A statistical measure of the degree of estimation error 95% Confidence Interval For the S&P 500 (1926–2004) Or a range from 7.7% to 16.9% not a great deal of accuracy

The Historical Tradeoff Between Risk and Return in Large Portfolios, 1926–2005 Note: a positive linear relationship between volatility and average returns for large portfolios.

Historical Volatility and Return for 500 Individual Stocks, by Size, Updated Quarterly, 1926–2005

The Returns of Individual Stocks Is there a positive linear relationship between volatility and average returns for individual stocks? As shown on the last slide, there is no precise relationship between volatility and average return for individual stocks. Larger stocks tend to have lower volatility than smaller stocks. All stocks tend to have higher risk for a given average return relative to large portfolios. There must be something magical going on with portfolios. Volatility doesn’t seem to be an adequate measure of risk to explain the expected return of individual stocks. Can we deal with this and resurrect our simple idea?

Going Forward As we discussed, the “market” pays investors for two services they provide: (1) surrendering their capital and so forgoing current consumption and (2) sharing in the aggregate risk of the economy. The first gets you the time value of money. The second gets you a risk premium whose size should depend on the share of aggregate risk you take on. From this we wrote E(r) = rf + θ We refine this to E(r) = rf + Units × Price In other words the premium cannot be the same for all assets. If you take more risk (more units) you get more of a premium.

Going Forward We need a reference for measuring risk and choose the risk the market has to distribute across investors or the “market portfolio” as that reference. The market portfolio is defined to have one unit of risk (Var(rm) = 1 unit of risk). Other assets will be evaluated relative to this definition of one unit of risk. From E(r) = rf + Units × Price we can see that “Price” = {E(rm) – rf}. (Note: Units = 1 for the market.) In other words we also defined the price per unit risk (the market risk premium).

Going Forward The hard part is to show that any asset’s contribution to the aggregate risk of the economy or Var(rm) is determined not by Var(ri) but rather by Cov(ri, rm). Standardize Cov(ri, rm) so that we measure the risk of each asset relative to our definition of one unit and we get beta: “Units” = βi = Cov(ri, rm)/Var(rm) The number of “units of risk” for asset i is βi. So E(ri)=rf + βi(E(rm) – rf) = rf + Units × Price.

Risk and Return When we are concerned with only one asset (or only a large portfolio) risk and return can be measured using expected return and variance of return. If there is more that one asset (so portfolios can be formed) risk becomes more complex. We will show there are two types of risk for individual assets: Diversifiable/nonsystematic/idiosyncratic risk Nondiversifiable/systematic/market risk Diversifiable risk can be eliminated without cost by combining assets into portfolios. (Big Wow.) Individual stocks are exposed to this type of risk. Large portfolios (generally) are not.

Diversification One of the most important lessons in all of finance concerns the power of diversification. Part of the total risk of any asset can be “diversified away” (its effect on portfolio risk is zero) without any loss in expected return (i.e. without cost). This also means that no compensation needs to be provided to investors for exposing their portfolios to this type of risk. Why should the economy pay you to hold risk that you can get rid of for free (or which is not part of the aggregate risk that all agents must some how share). This in turn implies that the risk/return relation is actually a systematic risk/return relation. An asset/portfolio with a lot of systematic risk will have a high expected return. An asset/portfolio with very little systematic risk will have a low expected return.

Diversification Example Suppose a large green ogre has approached you and demanded that you enter into a bet with him. The terms are that you must wager $10,000 and it must be decided by the flip of a coin, where heads he wins and tails you win. What is your expected payoff and what is your risk?

Example… The expected payoff from such a bet is of course $0 if the coin is fair. The standard deviation of this “position” is $10,000, reflecting the wide swings in value across the two outcomes (winning and losing). Can you suggest another approach that stays within the rules?

Example… If instead of wagering the whole $10,000 on one coin flip think about wagering $1 on each of 10,000 coin flips. The expected payoff on this version is still $0 so you haven’t changed the expectation. The standard deviation of the payoff in this version, however, is $100. Why the change? If we bet a penny on each of 1,000,000 coin flips, the risk, measured by the standard deviation of the payoff, is $10. The expected payoff is of course still $0.

Example… The example works so well at reducing risk because the coin flips are “independent.” If the coins were somehow perfectly correlated we would be right back in the first situation. Suppose all flips after the first always landed the same way as the first did, what good is bothering with 10,000 flips? With one dollar bets on 10,000 flips, for “flip correlations” between zero (independence) and one (perfect correlation) the measure of risk lies between $100 and $10,000. This is one way to see that the way an “asset” contributes to the risk of a large “portfolio” is determined by its correlation or covariance with the other assets in the portfolio.

Covariances and Correlations: The Keys to Understanding Diversification When thinking in terms of probability distributions, the covariance between the returns of two assets (A & B) equals Cov(RA,RB) = AB = When estimating covariances from historical data, the estimate is given by: Note: An asset’s variance is its covariance with itself.

Correlation Coefficients Covariances are difficult to interpret. Only the sign is really informative. Is a covariance of 20 big or small? The correlation coefficient, , is a normalized version of the covariance given by: Correlation = CORR(RA,RB) = The correlation will always lie between 1 and -1. A correlation of 1.0 implies ... A correlation of -1.0 implies ... A correlation of 0.0 implies ...

Risk and Return in Portfolios: Example Two Assets, A and B A portfolio, P, comprised of 50% of your total investment invested in asset A and 50% in B. There are five equally probable future outcomes, see below. In this case: VAR(RA) = 191.6, STD(RA) = 13.84, and E(RA) = 16%. VAR(RB) = 106.0, STD(RB) = 10.29, and E(RB) = 12%. COV(RA,RB) = 21 CORR(RA,RB) = 21/(13.84*10.29) = .1475. VAR(RP)=84.9, STD(Rp)=9.21, E(Rp)=14%=½ E(RA) + ½ E(RB) Var(Rp) or STD(RP) is less than that of either component!

Risk/return pairs with different weights Asset A • ½ and ½ portfolio • Asset B •

Risk return pairs with different correlations Asset A • Asset B •

How Diversification Works: The Variance of a Two-Asset Portfolio For a portfolio of two assets, A and B, the portfolio variance is: Or, For the two-asset example considered above: Portfolio Variance = .52(191.6) + .52(106.0) + 2(.5)(.5)21 = 84.9 (check for yourself)

For General Portfolios The expected return on a portfolio is the weighted average of the expected returns on each asset. If wi is the proportion of the investment invested in asset i, then Note that this is a ‘linear’ relationship.

For General Portfolios The variance of the portfolio’s return is given by: Not simple and not linear but very powerful.

In A Picture (N = 2) Var(RA)= Cov(RA, RA) Cov(RA, RB) Cov(RB, RA) Var(RB)= Cov(RB, RB) Portfolio variance is a weighted sum of these terms.

In A Picture (N = 3) Portfolio variance is a weighted sum of Var(RA) Cov(RA,RB) Cov(RA,RC) Cov(RB,RA) Var(RB) Cov(RB,RC) Cov(RC,RA) Cov(RC,RB) Var(RC) Portfolio variance is a weighted sum of these terms.

In A Picture (N = 10) Portfolio variance is a simple weighted sum of the terms in the squares. The blue are covariances and the white the variance terms.

In A Picture (N = 20) Which squares are becoming more important?

Volatility of an Equally Weighted Portfolio Versus the Number of Stocks

Implications of Diversification Diversification reduces risk. If asset returns were uncorrelated on average, diversification could eliminate all risk. They are positively correlated on average. Diversification will reduce risk but will not remove all of the risk. So, Individual stocks are exposed to two kinds of risk Diversifiable/nonsystematic/idiosyncratic risk. Disappears in well diversified portfolios. It disappears without cost, i.e. you need not sacrifice expected return to reduce/eliminate this type of risk. The law of one price implies that there will be no premium for diversifiable risk. Nondiversifiable/systematic/market risk. Does not disappear in well diversified portfolios. A large (well diversified) portfolio has only this type of risk. Must trade expected return for systematic risk. Level of systematic risk in a portfolio is an important choice for an individual.

Measuring Systematic Risk How can we estimate the amount or proportion of an asset's risk that is diversifiable or non-diversifiable? The Beta Coefficient is the slope coefficient in an OLS regression of stock returns on market returns: Beta is a measure of sensitivity: it describes how strongly the stock excess return moves with the market excess return. What is the expected percent change in the excess return of security i for a 1% change in the excess return of the market portfolio? It is standardized covariance, standardized by a measure of risk we call “one unit”.

The CAPM Intuition E[Ri] = RF (risk free rate) + Risk Premium = Appropriate Discount Rate Risk free assets earn the risk-free rate (think of this as a rental rate on capital). If the asset is risky, we need to add a risk premium. The size of the risk premium depends on the amount of systematic risk for the asset (stock, bond, or investment project) and the price per unit risk. Aside: could a risk premium ever be negative?

The CAPM Intuition Formalized Number of units of systematic risk (b) Market Risk Premium or the price per unit risk Very simple, what is the expected return on any risky asset? Start with the risk free rate and add a risk premium that is the premium per unit risk times the number of units of systematic risk. The number of units of systematic risk is beta. The risk premium is the expected return on an asset with a beta of one less the risk free rate. The expression above is referred to as the “Security Market Line” (SML) or commonly just the CAPM.

Betas and Portfolios The beta of a portfolio is the weighted average of the component assets’ betas. Example: You have 30% of your money in asset X, which has X = 1.4 and 70% of your money in asset Y, which has Y = 0.8. Your portfolio beta is: P = .30(1.4) + .70(0.8) = 0.98. Why do we care about this feature of betas? It further demonstrates that an asset’s beta measures the contribution that asset makes to the systematic risk of a portfolio! Note that this is a linear relation just like expected return.

Risk and the Cost of Capital Three inputs are required: (i) An estimate of the risk free interest rate. The current yield on short term treasury bills is one proxy. Practitioners tend to favor the current yield on longer-term treasury bonds but this may be a fix for a problem we don’t fully understand. Must adjust the market risk premium accordingly. (ii) An estimate of the market risk premium, E(Rm) - Rf. Expectations are not observable. Use a historically estimated value. Use the average spread between the risk free rate and the market return. (iii) An estimate of beta. Is the asset or a close substitute for the asset traded in financial markets? If so, gather data and run an OLS regression or look it up from a variety of sources. If not, it gets fuzzy.

The Market Risk Premium The market is defined as a portfolio of all wealth including real estate, human capital, etc. In practice, a broad based stock index, such as the S&P 500 or the portfolio of all NYSE stocks, is generally used. We want the expected return on the market portfolio above the risk free rate. Again, we use the average of this difference over time. Historically, the average market risk premium has been about 8% - 9% above the return on treasury bills. The average market risk premium has been about 6% - 7% above the return on treasury bonds. More recent averages are considerably lower.