Lecture 1: Asset Allocation: Investments
Lecture 1: Asset Allocation: Investments
Investments
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Overview
1. Introduction
2. Investors Risk Tolerance
3. Allocating Capital Between a Risky and riskless asset
4. Allocating Capital among Multiple Risky Securities
5. Conclusions
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One should always divide his wealth into three parts: a third in land, a
third in merchandise, and a third ready to hand.
Rabbi Issac bar Aha, 4 century AD.
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Introduction
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Mean-Variance Analysis
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Framework
An investor has the choice of investing $50,000 in a risk-free
investment or a risky investment.
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Framework
1. Calculate the expected return for each investment
51, 500
1 = 3%
50, 000
100%
, Definition: The excess return is the return net of the risk-free rate
re = r r f
, Definition: The risk premium is the expected excess return
E(re ) = E(r r f ) =
1
1
97% + (53%) = E(r) r f = 22%
2
2
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Framework
3. Calculate the riskiness of the investments
2 (r) =
i
1 h
(1.00 0.25)2 + (0.50 0.25)2 = 0.56
2
(r) =
, If returns are not normal (as is the case here), you need other
assumptions to make variance a perfect proxy for riskiness.
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Framework
4. Finally, we need to determine if this is a reasonable amount of
risk for the extra expected return.
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Indifference Curves
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Indifference Curves
Each curve plots the same utility level for different risk aversion A.
Higher A implies that for a given , investors require higher mean return
to achieve same level of utility.
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1
rCE = U(r) = E(r) A2 (r)
2
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For the risky asset in our example, where E(r) = 0.25 and
2r = 0.56, lets determine rCE for different levels of risk-aversion:
A
rCE
0.04
24%
0.50
11%
0.78
3%
1.00
-3%
If you have A = 0.50 would you hold the risky or risk-free asset?
What level of risk-aversion do you have to have to be indifferent
between the risky and the risk-free asset?
If you are more risk-averse will rCE be larger or smaller?
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rA =
E(rA ) =
A =
rf =
w=
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= rA
= 25%
= 75%
= 3%
= ??
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rp = wrA + (1 w) r f
rp = r f + w(rA r f )
| {z }
E(r p ) =
rAe
r f + wE(rAe )
(1)
2p = E[(r p r p )2 ]
= E((wrA wrA )2 ]
= w2 E[(rA rA )2 ]
= w2 2A
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E(rA ) r f
p
E(r p ) = r f +
A
|{z}
|
{z
} amount of risk
price of risk
The price of risk is the return premium per unit of portfolio risk
(standard deviation) and depends only the prices of available
securities.
The standard term for this ratio is the Sharpe Ratio.
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rf
slope =
E (rA ) rf
Std. Dev.
one risky-asset
andI
Lecture
3: Asset Allocation
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Which Portfolio?
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Which Portfolio?
Mathematically, the optimal portfolio is the solution to the
following problem:
1
U = max U(r p ) = max E(r p ) A2p
w
w
2
where, we know,
E(r p ) = r f + wE(rA r f )
2p = w2 2A
1 2 2
max U(r p ) = max r f + wE(rA r f ) Aw A
w
w
2
Solution
E(rA r f )
dU
|w=w = 0 w =
dw
A2A
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W*
Lecture 3: Asset Allocation I
25
w
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Which Portfolio?
E(r p )
0.25
0.50
0.78
1.00
1.56
0.78
0.49
0.39
0.37
0.20
0.14
0.12
1.17
0.51
0.37
0.29
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Which Portfolio?
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2p = E[(r p r p )2 ]
= w2 2A + (1 w)2 2B + 2w(1 w)cov(rA , rB )
or, since AB = cov(rA , rB )/(A B ),
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E(r)
A
B
25%
10%
75%
25%
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Case AB = 1
Plug these numbers into these two equations:
E(r p )
2.5%
10%
17.5%
25.0%
32.5%
0.0%
25%
50.0%
75.0%
100.0%
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The picture looks very similar to the case where there one risky and one riskless asset.
Because the two assets are perfectly correlated, we can build a synthetic riskless asset.
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Case AB = 1
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Because the two assets are perfectly correlated, we can build a synthetic riskless asset.
Some combinations are dominated in this case. Which ones?
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p = wA (1 w)B
0 = wA (1 w)B
w = B /(A + B ) = 0.25
Plugging this into the expected return equation we get:
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To calculate the minimum variance frontier in this 2 asset world you the
following:
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For this section, lets assume we can only trade in the risk-free
asset (r f = 0.03) and risky assets B and C, where,
Asset
B
C
E(r)
10%
15%
20%
30%
and BC = 0.5.
We can compute the Minimum Variance frontier created by
combinations of the B and C
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We call this portfolio the tangency portfolio (why?). In combination with the risk-free asset,
it provides the "steepest" CAL (the one with the highest slope)
It is sometimes called the Mean-Variance Efficient or MVE portfolio.
Why is this the portfolio we want?
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MVE portfolio
How do we find MVE portfolio mathematically?
Find the portfolio with the highest Sharpe Ratio (Why?):
max
w
E(r p ) r f
p
where
wBp =
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MVE portfolio
p
SRMV E =
e
E(rMV
0.095
E)
=
= 0.4359
MV E
0.2179
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Now lets look at the optimal portfolio problem when there are
three assets.
The expected returns, standard deviations, and correlation matrix
are again:
Asset
E(r)
A
B
C
5%
10%
15%
10%
20%
30%
Correlations
Assets
A
B
A
B
C
1.0
0.0
0.5
0.0
1.0
0.5
0.5
0.5
1.0
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This plot adds the mean-variance frontier and the CAL to the two-asset portfolios.
This shows that the MVE portfolio will be a portfolio of portfolios, or a combination of all of
the assets.
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Take the three risky assets A,B,C from before with r f = 3.5%.
The relevant expected returns, standard deviation, and
correlation data are:
Asset
E(r)
A
B
C
5%
10%
15%
10%
20%
30%
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Correlations
Assets
A
B
A
B
C
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1.0
0.0
0.5
0.0
1.0
0.5
C
0.5
0.5
1.0
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wMV E
0.0218
= 0.4619
0.5091
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rMV E = 0.1244
MV E = 0.2163
SRMV E = 0.4131
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wMV E
0.0168
0.3616
=
0.3924
0.2292
rMV E = 0.1302
MV E = 0.1961
SRMV E = 0.4858
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wMV E
0.1215
0.3924
=
0.3685
0.1175
rMV E = 0.1065
MV E = 0.1646
SRMV E = 0.4342
wMV E
0.0168
0.3616
=
0.3924
0.2292
rMV E = 0.1302
MV E = 0.1961
SRMV E = 0.4858
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Understanding Diversification
1. Start with our equation for variance:
N
2p = w2i 2i + wi w j cov(ri , r j )
i=1
i=1
j=1
i6= j
2p
=
1
N2
2i +
i=1
i=1
1
N2
cov(ri , r j )
j=1
i6= j
N
1
=
2i
N i=1
cov =
N
1
cov(ri , r j )
N(N 1)
j=1
i6= j
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Understanding Diversification
2p
N 1
1
2
+
cov
=
N
N
1
N 1
0 and
1
N
N
3. Only the average covariance matters for large portfolios.
4. If the average covariance is zero, then the portfolio variance is
close to zero for large portfolios.
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Understanding Diversification
This plot shows how the standard deviation of a portfolio of
average NYSE stocks changes as we change the number of
assets in the portfolio.
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Understanding Diversification
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Conclusions
In this lecture we have developed mean-variance portfolio analysis.
1. We call it mean-variance analysis because we assume that all
that matters to investors is the average return and the return
variance of their portfolio.
, You should hold the same portfolio of risky assets no matter what
your tolerance for risk.
I
If you want less risk, combine this portfolio with investment in the
risk-free asset.
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, Caveat: remember that you have to include every asset you have
in the analysis; including human capital, real estate, etc.
, This is what we will spend much of the rest of the course on!
In the next lecture we will investigate Equilibrium Theory
Equilibrium theory takes Markowitz portfolio theory, and extends it
to determine how prices must be set in an efficient market.
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