1 / 15

EXAMPLE: PORTFOLIO RISK & RETURN

EXAMPLE: PORTFOLIO RISK & RETURN. PORTFOLIO RISK. PORTFOLIO RISK: EXAMPLE. Return and Risk for Portfolios. SUPPOSE EXPECTED RETURNS ARE AS FOLLOWS:. EXAMPLE:INTERNATIONAL PORTFOLIO SELECTION. CORRELATIONS BETWEEN RETURNS ON DIFFERENT MARKETS. EFFICIENT PORTFOLIOS.

ciaran-shaw
Download Presentation

EXAMPLE: PORTFOLIO RISK & RETURN

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. EXAMPLE: PORTFOLIO RISK & RETURN

  2. PORTFOLIO RISK

  3. PORTFOLIO RISK: EXAMPLE

  4. Return and Risk for Portfolios

  5. SUPPOSE EXPECTED RETURNS ARE AS FOLLOWS:

  6. EXAMPLE:INTERNATIONAL PORTFOLIO SELECTION

  7. CORRELATIONS BETWEEN RETURNS ON DIFFERENT MARKETS

  8. EFFICIENT PORTFOLIOS

  9. Security Market Line (SML)

  10. Capital Market Line (CML) • Equilibrium relationship between E(Rp) and σp for efficient portfolios • Linear efficient set of CAPM by combining Market portfolio with risk free (rf) borrowing and lending • CML only permits to well-diversified portfolios; portfolios not employing M, the market portfolio, will plot below the CML • Equation of CML: E(Rp)=rf + [(E(RM)-Rf )/σM] σ(Rp) • Slope of CML: price of risk {E(RM) – Rf }/ σM • Price of time: Rf

  11. Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM) • Developed by Sharpe, Treynor, Lintner and Mossin • An equilibrium theory of how to price and measure risk of portfolios as well as individual security • Concerning decomposition of risk into two components: systematic (market, non-diversifiable) and unsystematic (unique, diversifiable) • Stating that required return on any investment is the risk free return plus a risk premium measured by its systematic risk E(ri)=rf+[E(rm)-rf]β where β = covariance risk of security i E(rm)-rf = market risk premium

  12. Feasible Set of Risky Portfolios Expected portfolio Return Kp B C A D Feasible, or Attainable, Set E Risk, σp

  13. Optimal Portfolio Selection Expected portfolio Return Kp B C Optimal Portfolio Investor B A D Optimal Portfolio Investor A E Risk, σp

  14. Efficient Frontier with Risk-Free Asset Expected portfolio Return Kp new efficient portfolio Z B KM C M Y=mx+b Ki=Krf+σi/σm(Km-Krf) b = intercept m = slope = Km-Krf/σm A D kRF E rm Risk, σp

More Related