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Portfolio Diversification Modern Portfolio Theory
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Types of Risk Total risk when a security is held alone –e.g. standard deviation and variance Diversifiable Risk –Unique risk, Firm-specific risk, nonsystematic risk Nondiversifiable Risk –Market risk, Systematic risk In a “well-diversified” portfolio, the only risk from a security that remains is the systematic risk.
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Sample Statistics Expected return E(r A ) = s=1 to n p (s) r A(s) Where s is the possible state, p (s) is the probability that state s will occur, r A(s) is the return on asset A when state s occurs Variance and standard deviation A 2 = s=1 to n p(s) [r A (s) - E(r A )] 2 A = square root of A 2 If ex ante probabilities are not available –Use historic arithmetic average as a proxy for E(r) –Use historic sample standard deviation as a proxy for standard deviation
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Effectiveness of Diversification Covariance between two securities AB = s=1 to n p(s) [r A (s) - E(r A )] [r B (s) - E(r B )] –Use historic sample covariance as a proxy Correlation coefficient between two securities – = AB / ( A B ) – must be between -1 and 1 –Special cases of = 1 = 0 = -1 When does diversification work?
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Return and Risk of a Portfolio Return of a Portfolio r = i=1 to k w i r i –where k is the number of securities in the portfolio Variance of a Portfolio 2 = i=1 to k j=1 to k w i w j ij i j
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Examples of Diversification The 2-asset Case Multiple assets and diversification Portfolio Risk versus Security Risk
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Portfolio: An Ex Ante Example Economyp(s)r A (s)r B (s) Boom0.4030%-5% Bust0.60-10%25% E(r A ) = 6%, E(r B ) = 13% A = 19.60%, B = 14.70% Covariance between assets A and B: – A,B = 0.40 x (0.30 - 0.06) x (-0.05 - 0.13) + 0.60 x (-0.10 - 0.06) x (0.25 - 0.13) = -0.0288 Correlation Coefficient – A,B = -0.0288 / (0.196 x 0.147) = -1
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Portfolio Example (continued) Portfolio weights –50% in Asset A and 50% in Asset B E(r) on portfolio = 0.50 x 0.06 + 0.50 x 0.13 = 9.5% Portfolio variance = w Y 2 Y 2 + w Z 2 Z 2 + 2 w Y w Z Y,Z = 0.5 2 x 0.0384 + 0.5 2 x 0.0216 + 2 x 0.5 x 0.5 x -0.0288 = 0.0006 Standard Deviation = 2.45%
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Portfolio Example (concluded) Portfolio weights –put 3/7 in asset A and 4/7 in asset B: –An alternative approach, compute portfolio’s return in each scenario Economyp (s) r A(s) r B(s) r portfolio (s) Boom0.4030%-5%10% Bust0.60-10%25%10% E(r portfolio ) = 10% portfolio = 0%
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The Risky Portfolio: Asset Allocation Investment Opportunity Set –Different risk-return combinations created using different portfolio weights Even 2 assets can provide an infinite number of combinations! Minimum Risk Portfolio Efficient Set (Efficient Frontier) –Portfolios that represent the best risk-return combinations
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Investment Opportunity Set: -1 < < 1 Minimum Variance Portfolio Efficient Set * * * * * *
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Investment Opportunity Set: = 1 Minimum Variance Portfolio Efficient Set
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Investment Opportunity Set: = -1 Minimum Variance Portfolio Efficient Set * * * * *
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The Complete Portfolio: Asset Allocation The Risk-free Asset The Optimal Risky Portfolio The Optimal Capital Allocation Line (CAL) Choosing the complete portfolio
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The Optimal Capital Allocation Line Optimal Risky Portfolio * * * * * * Rf = 8% Optimal CAL
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Asset Allocation: A Summary Constructing the Optimal CAL –Construct the Investment Opportunity Set –Identify the Efficient Frontier –Identify the Optimal Risky Portfolio Choose the Complete Portfolio –Allocate investment between the risk-free asset and the Optimal Risky Portfolio –Choose a point on the Optimal CAL
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The Separation Property Construction of the Optimal CAL is independent of an investor’s risk preference An investor’s risk preference only affects his choice of the complete portfolio
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The Complete Portfolio: An Example The Optimal Risky Portfolio (P): Assetwt in PE(r) A0.376510% B0.623517% –E(r P ) =.3765 x 10% +.6235 x 17% = 14.3645% The Risk-free Asset: r f = 8% Investor John puts 45% in the risk-free asset and 55% in the optimal risky portfolio (P): –E(r C ) =.45 x 8% +.55 x 14.3645% = 11.5%
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The Complete Portfolio Example (continued) For John’s portfolio (45% in the risk-free asset): –How much of Assets A and B does he own? wt in A =.3765 x.55 =.207 wt in B =.6235 x.55 =.343 wt in risk-free asset =.450 Investor Adam puts 90% in the risk-free asset: –E(r C ) =.90 x 8% +.10 x 14.3645% = 8.64% wt in A =.3765 x.10 =.038 wt in B =.6235 x.10 =.062 wt in risk-free asset =.900
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Asset Weights Wt of assets in the (Optimal) Risky Portfolio: –Depends only on the assets’ expected return, variances, and covariances Wt of the (Optimal) Risky Portfolio in the Complete Portfolio: –investor’s risk preference Wt of assets in the Complete Portfolio: –wt of assets in the Risky Portfolio * wt of the Risky Portfolio in the Complete Portfolio
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Asset Pricing Models The Single-Factor Model –R i = E(R i ) + i M + e i E(R i ) is the expected excess return on stock i M is the unexpected change in the factor e i is an unexpected firm-specific event
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The Market Index Model Regression and the Market Index Model –Ri = ai + biRM + ei Intercept ( ai): Abnormal return Slope (bi): Sensitivity to the Market Residual (ei): Unexpected firm-specific event RM (X - independent): Excess return on the Market Ri (Y - dependent): Excess return on stock i
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Variance in the Market Model Total Variance 2 i = i 2 2 M + 2 (e i ) Systematic Variance + Firm-specific Variance Proportion explained by the Market Model 2 = i 2 2 M / 2 i Systematic variance / Total variance
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Scatter Diagram of the Market Model = -0.0006 = 1.0177 = 0.5715
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