Capm Apm
Capm Apm
Capm Apm
Risk - possibility that returns will be less than (greater than) those expected Measures of Risk o Total Risk Variability of returns on an investment in the firm A measure of risk stated in absolute terms (2 or ) A measure of risk state in relative (scaled) terms (CoV) where CoV = coefficient of variation (/expected value) If public firm - variability of stock returns If private return - variability of generated cash flows o Unsystematic Risk - Firm Specific Risk Diversifiable Risk A portion of Total risk that is considered unsystematic and is diversifiable through a Portfolio Effect that arises because returns across firms is less than perfectly positively correlated. With the assumption that investors are fully diversified, this risk disappears (is diversified away) and all that remains is non-diversifiable, or Systematic Risk. o Systematic risk Market Risk Non-diversifiable Risk A portion of Total Risk associated with the market where market risk is the economy wide risk that is inescapable. Conclusion: Systematic Risk represents the contribution to portfolio risk and, assuming that the typical investor is well diversified, is the only risk that is relevant to the investor. One systematic measure of risk is the CAPM Beta () Sometimes proxied by single index market model beta (b) Another could be a vector of betas in APT model
UNSYSTEMATIC RISK = FIRM-SPECIFIC RISK = DIVERSIFIABLE RISK SYSTEMATIC RISK = MARKET RISK = NON-DIVERSIFIABLE RISK
Advantages: o Beta relates individual stock return to overall market return o Beta > 1 then individual return more volatile than market Stock has greater systematic risk o Beta = 1 then individual return volatility same as the market Systematic risk of stock same as overall market risk o Beta < 1 then individual return less volatile than the market Stock has lower systematic risk o Beta measures calculated and published by different financial companies S&P, Value Line o Beta of portfolio is weighted average of Betas of all stocks in portfolio
E(Rj) = 0 + ( Bij * Fi )
i=1
= expected rate of asset j = a constant intercept term that is unspecified = APM sensitivity of asset j to factor i = Unknown Factor i of multiple (m) unknown factors
Advantages: o More general pricing model o Sensitivities relate individual asset return to multiple economic factors o Multiple economic factors, not just market risk premium Inflation Interest rates Economic growth Industry effects Market risk premium Exchange Rates ??? o Intercept term not specified o Does not require utility assumption o Relies on arbitrage for derivation o Does not require efficient and perfect markets as long as some arbitragers exist
Comparison Chart Between CAPM and APM CAPM Capital Asset Pricing Model
utility based valuation model that posits a linear relationship between the returns of an asset and the market risk premium
Utility based derivation Single factor Single factor = market risk premium Intercept term = risk free rate Requires perfect markets for derivation Requires well diversified investors for derivation Theoretical model specifies CAPM Beta as single systematic risk measure