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Applied Finance Lectures 1. What is finance? 2. The diffusion of the discounted cash flow method 3. Markowitz and the birth of modern portfolio theory 4. CAPM: the relationship between expected returns and risk 5. The Efficient Market Hypothesis: do stock prices move randomly? 6. Modigliani-Miller: does financing matter? 7. Black – Merton – Scholes: how to value options 8. Beyond Black-Merton-Scholes: state prices, stochastic discount factors
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What is Finance? Equity Debt Investors Dividends Companies Interests Operating cash flow Capital expenditures Portfolio management
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Asset pricing models Time Uncertainty Discounted cash flow method Capital Asset Pricing Model Markowitz Sharpe Lintner Option Pricing Models Black Scholes Cox Ross Rubinstein State Prices Arrow-Debreu Stochastic discount factors
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Outline 1. What is finance? 2. The diffusion of the discounted cash flow method 3. Markowitz and the birth of modern portfolio theory 4. CAPM: the relationship between expected returns and risk 5. The Efficient Market Hypothesis: do stock prices move randomly? 6. Modigliani-Miller: does financing matter? 7. Black – Merton – Scholes: how to value options 8. Beyond Black-Merton-Scholes: state prices, stochastic discount factors
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Discounted cash flow method Cash flows Required rates of return PV = C 1 v 1 + C 2 v 2 + …+C n v n
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Penetration rate of discount cash flow Callahan, C. and S. Haka, A Model and Test of Interfirm Innovation Diffusion: the Case of Discounted Cash Flow Techniques, Manuscript January 2002
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Outline 1. What is finance? 2. The diffusion of the discounted cash flow method 3. Markowitz and the birth of modern portfolio theory 4. CAPM: the relationship between expected returns and risk 5. The Efficient Market Hypothesis: do stock prices move randomly? 6. Modigliani-Miller: does financing matter? 7. Black – Merton – Scholes: how to value options 8. Beyond Black-Merton-Scholes: state prices, stochastic discount factors
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Markowitz (1952) Portfolio selection Return of portfolio: normal distribution Characteristics of a portfolio: 1.Expected return 2.Risk: Variance/Standard deviation
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Calculation of optimal portfolio
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Markowitz: the birth of modern portfolio theory
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Outline 1. What is finance? 2. The diffusion of the discounted cash flow method 3. Markowitz and the birth of modern portfolio theory 4. CAPM: the relationship between expected returns and risk 5. The Efficient Market Hypothesis: do stock prices move randomly? 6. Modigliani-Miller: does financing matter? 7. Black – Merton – Scholes: how to value options
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Capital Asset Pricing Model
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Expected return Beta Risk free interest rate r rMrM 1 β
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Net Present Value Calculation with CAPM
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Outline 1. What is finance? 2. The diffusion of the discounted cash flow method 3. Markowitz and the birth of modern portfolio theory 4. CAPM: the relationship between expected returns and risk 5. The Efficient Market Hypothesis: do stock prices move randomly? 6. Modigliani-Miller: does financing matter? 7. Black – Merton – Scholes: how to value options 8. Beyond Black-Merton-Scholes: state prices, stochastic discount factors
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Jensen 1968 - Distribution of “t” values for excess return 115 mutual funds 1955-1964 Not significantly different from 0
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US Equity Mutual Funds 1982-1991 (Malkiel, Journal of Finance June 1995) Average Annual Return Capital appreciation funds 16.32% Growth funds15.81% Small company growth funds13.46% Growth and income funds15.97% Equity income funds15.66% S&P 500 Index17.52% Average deviation from benchmark -3.20% (risk adjusted)
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The Efficient Market Hypothesis S&P 500 2000-2004
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The Efficient Market Hypothesis S&P 500 2000-2004
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The Random Walk Model
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Outline 1. What is finance? 2. The diffusion of the discounted cash flow method 3. Markowitz and the birth of modern portfolio theory 4. CAPM: the relationship between expected returns and risk 5. The Efficient Market Hypothesis: do stock prices move randomly? 6. Modigliani-Miller: does financing matter? 7. Black – Merton – Scholes: how to value options 8. Beyond Black-Merton-Scholes: state prices, stochastic discount factors
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Does the capital structure matters? Modigliani Miller 1958 : NO, under some conditions Debt Equity
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Trade-off theory Market value Debt ratio Value of all-equity firm PV(Tax Shield) PV(Costs of financial distress)
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Outline 1. What is finance? 2. The diffusion of the discounted cash flow method 3. Markowitz and the birth of modern portfolio theory 4. CAPM: the relationship between expected returns and risk 5. The Efficient Market Hypothesis: do stock prices move randomly? 6. Modigliani-Miller: does financing matter? 7. Black – Merton – Scholes: how to value options 8. Beyond Black-Merton-Scholes: state prices, stochastic discount factors
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Options Right to: Buy (CALL) Sell (PUT) an asset at a fixed price (EXERCICE PRICE / STRIKING PRICE) up to or at a future date (MATURITY) at a future date (EUROPEAN OPTION) up to a future date (AMERICAN OPTION)
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Buy 1 Fortis share
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Buying a put Put Stock Stock + Put
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Buying a call Call Bond Bond + Call
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How to value an option Standard present value calculation fails Value of option = f(Stock price, Time) Required rate of return = f(Stock price, Time) Black Merton Scholes Combine stock and option to create a riskless position Law of one price (no arbitrage) f=(#shares)(Stockprice)+Bond
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The fundamental partial differential equation Assume we are in a risk neutral world Expected change of the value of derivative security Change of the value with respect to time Change of the value with respect to the price of the underlying asset Change of the value with respect to volatility
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And now, the Black Scholes formulas Closed form solutions for European options on non dividend paying stocks assuming: Constant volatility Constant risk-free interest rate Call option: Put option: N(x) = cumulative probability distribution function for a standardized normal variable
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Binomial option pricing model Stock price S Stock price S u Option f u Stock price S d Option f d Time interval Δt Risk neutral probability Risk free interest rate
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Outline 1. What is finance? 2. The diffusion of the discounted cash flow method 3. Markowitz and the birth of modern portfolio theory 4. CAPM: the relationship between expected returns and risk 5. The Efficient Market Hypothesis: do stock prices move randomly? 6. Modigliani-Miller: does financing matter? 7. Black – Merton – Scholes: how to value options 8. Beyond Black-Merton-Scholes: state prices, stochastic discount factors
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State prices Current price State UpDown StockSSuSu SdSd Risk free bond11+rΔt Law of one price (no free lunches) Price of a digital option
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Stochastic discount factors Valuing a derivative: Expectation operator Stochastic discount factor Random payoff of derivative
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Growth of derivative industry
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Explosion of the market for options
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