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Published byAugustus Foster Modified over 9 years ago
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Portfolio Theory Capital Asset Pricing Model and Arbitrage Pricing Theory
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Contribution of MPT Establish diversifiable versus nondiversifiable risks Quantify diversifiable and nondiversifiable risk
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Market Equilibrium Condition Law of one price Price of risk = Reward-to-risk ratio For well diversified portfolios, the only remaining risks are systematic risk Hence,
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CAPM Assumptions (see recommended textbook) The Equilibrium World –The Market Portfolio is the Optimal Risky Portfolio –the Capital Market Line is the Optimal CAL The Separation Theorem –aka Mutual Fund Theorem
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Market Risk Premium Market Risk Premium: r M - r f = A 2 M –depends on aggregate investors’ risk aversion (A) –and market’s volatility ( 2 M ) Historically: – r M - r f = 12.5% - 3.76% = 8.74% – M = 20.39% – 2 M = 0.2039 2 = 0.0416 Implying an average investor has: – A = 2.1
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Reward and Risk in CAPM Reward –Risk Premium: [E(r i ) - r F ] Risk –Systematic Risk: i = iM / M 2 Ratio of Risk Premium to Systematic Risk = [E(r i ) - r F ] / i
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Equilibrium in a CAPM World This condition must apply to all assets, including the market portfolio Define M = 1 CAPM equation: E(r i ) = r F + i x [E(r M ) - r F ]
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Systematic Risk of a Portfolio Systematic Risk of a Portfolio is a weighted average = w i i
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The Security Market Line The Security Market Line (SML) –return-beta ( ) relationship for individual securities The Capital Market(Allocation) Line (CML/CAL) –return-standard deviation relationship for efficient portfolios
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Security Market Line (SML) M Stock i SML r f =7% Market Risk premium=8%
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Uses of CAPM Benchmarking Capital Budgeting Regulation
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CAPM and Index Models Index models - uses actual portfolios Test for mean-variance efficiency of the index Bad index or bad model?
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Security Characteristic Line (SCL) (A Scatter Diagram) = -0.0006 = 1.0177 = 0.5715
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Estimating Beta Past does not always predict the future Regression toward the mean Is Beta and CAPM dead?
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Arbitrage Pricing Theory (APT) Assumption –Risk-free arbitrage cannot exist in an efficient market –Arbitrage A zero-investment portfolio with sure profit –e.g. violation of law of one price
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APT Equilibrium Condition Law of One Price If two portfolios, A and B, both only have one systematic factor (k), There can be many risk factors. The equilibrium condition holds for each risk factor.
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APT example EconomyStock AStock B Good10%12% Bad5%6% Stock A sells for $10 per share Stock B sells for $50 per share Arbitrage strategy –Short sell 500 shares of stock A ($5000) –Buy 100 shares of stock B ($5000) Net investment = $5000 - $5000 = $0 Arbitrage return EconomyPortfolio Good-500+600 = 100 =2% Bad-250+300 = 50 = 1%
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Creating A Zero-beta (risk-free) Portfolio The case of 2 well-diversified portfolios, v and u Weights for v and u in the Zero-beta Portfolio: w v = - u / ( v - u ) w u = v / ( v - u ) Note: w v + w u = 1 The Zero-beta Portfolio has no risk (why?) Excess return on the Zero-beta Portfolio v+u = v w v + u w u Arbitrage opportunity? –As long as v+u 0 there is an arbitrage opportunity –The market is out of equilibrium
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Arbitrage: An Example Portfolio v: v = 1.3, v = 2% Portfolio u: u = 0.8, u = 1% Since alpha 0, there is an arbitrage opportunity –Create a zero-beta (risk-free) portfolio: w v = -.8/(1.3 -.8) = -1.6 w u = 1.3/(1.3 -.8) = 2.6 – v+u = 2.6 * 0.8 + -1.6 * 1.3 = 0 – v+u = 2.6 * 1% + -1.6 * 2% = - 0.6% Sell the portfolio and buy the risk-free asset
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Multi-factor Models Factor Portfolio (R MK ) –A well-diversified portfolio with beta=1 on one factor and beta=0 on any other factor R i = r fi + i1 R M1 + i2 R M2 + e i –r fi is the risk-free rate –R M1 is the excess return on factor portfolio 1 –R M2 is the excess return on factor portfolio 2
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Summary CAPM –Empirical application of CAPM needs a proxy for the market portfolio –Empirical evidence lacks support Could be due to poor proxy or poor model APT –Difficult to apply empirically –The model does not identify systematic risk factors Empirical Models –Lacks economic intuition –E.g. Market-to-book ratio as a systematic risk factor
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