Chapter 7 Student
Chapter 7 Student
CHAPTER 7
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Chapter content
I. RETURN
II. RISK
III. DIVERSIFICATION
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PART
1
RETURN
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Returns: Definition
Time 0 1
Percentage Returns: the sum of the cash received and the
change in value of the asset, divided by the initial investment.
Initial
investment
Return
The higher the risk, the higher the required rate of (expected) return
Both are important in financial decision-making.
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1. Realized return
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Returns: Example
Suppose you bought 100 shares of XYZ Co. one year ago at $45.
Over the last year, you received $27 in dividends. At the end of the
year, the stock sells for $48. What is your percentage return?
Realized return: Example
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2. Expected return
Or
E(R) = w1R1 + w2Rq + ...+ wnRn
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2. Expected return: Example
Consider the following two risky asset world. There is a 1/3 chance of
each state of the economy, and the only assets are a stock fund and a
bond fund.
Rate of Return
Scenario Probability Stock Fund Bond Fund
Recession 33.3% -7% 17%
Normal 33.3% 12% 7%
Boom 33.3% 28% -3%
2. Expected return: Example
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PART 2
RISK
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WHAT IS RISK?
Risk in finance is defined in terms of variability of actual
returns on an investment around an expected return, even
when those returns represent positive outcomes.
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WHAT IS RISK?
Average Standard
Series Annual Return Deviation Distribution
– 90% 0% + 90%
Return: Example
– 3s – 2s – 1s 0 + 1s + 2s + 3s
– 48.2% – 28.1% – 8.0% 12.1% 32.2% 52.3% 72.4% Return on
large company common
68.26% stocks
95.44%
99.74%
Variance and standard deviation as Measures of Risk
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Variance Calculation
p R
n
E ( R )
2
Var ( R ) 2
R i i (7.3)
i 1
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Variance
2
R
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Standard Deviation
There is 30% chance the total return on Dell stock will be -3.45%, a
30% chance it will be +5.17% , a 30% chance it will be +12.07% and a
10% chance that it will be +24.14%. Estimate variance and standard
deviation.
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Variance & Probability
Example: Given the following data for Newco's stock, calculate the
stock's variance and standard deviation. The expected return based on
the data is 14%.
Scenario Probability Return
Worst Case 10% 10%
Base Case 80% 14%
Best Case 10% 18%
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Different Types of Risk
Systematic Risk - influences a large number Unsystematic Risk - affects a very small
of assets. A significant political event, for number of assets. An example is news that
example, could affect several of the assets in affects a specific stock such as a sudden
your portfolio. It is virtually impossible to strike by employees.
protect yourself against this type of risk. Diversification is the only way to protect
yourself from unsystematic risk.
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Different Types of Risk
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PART
3
DIVERSIFICATION
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Risk and Diversification
Let's say you have a portfolio of only airline stocks – Malaysia Airline for example
What happen after the accidents of MH370 and MH17?
Your investment will experience a noticeable drop in value
If, however, you counterbalanced the airline industry stocks with a couple of
railway stocks only part of your portfolio would be affected.
But, you could diversify even further because there are many risks that affect
both rail and air (each is involved in transportation)
Statisticians would say that rail and air stocks have a strong correlation.
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Risk and Diversification
3 main things you should do to ensure that you are adequately diversified:
2. Your securities should vary in risk. You're not restricted to picking only blue
chip stocks. Picking different investments with different rates of return will
ensure that large gains offset losses in other areas. This doesn't mean that you
need to jump into high-risk investments such as penny stocks.
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11.3 The Return and Risk for Portfolios: Example
Stock Fund Bond Fund
Rate of Squared Rate of Squared
Scenario Return Deviation Return Deviation
Recession -7% 0.0324 17% 0.0100
Normal 12% 0.0001 7% 0.0000
Boom 28% 0.0289 -3% 0.0100
Expected return 11.00% 7.00%
Variance 0.0205 0.0067
Standard Deviation 14.3% 8.2%
Note that stocks have a higher expected return than bonds and higher risk. Let
us turn now to the risk-return tradeoff of a portfolio that is 50% invested in
bonds and 50% invested in stocks.
Portfolios
Rate of Return
Scenario Stock fund Bond fund Portfolio squared deviation
Recession -7% 17% 5.0% 0.0016
Normal 12% 7% 9.5% 0.0000
Boom 28% -3% 12.5% 0.0012
The rate of return on the portfolio is a weighted average of the returns on the
stocks and bonds in the portfolio:
rP w B rB w S rS
Portfolios
Rate of Return
Scenario Stock fund Bond fund Portfolio squared deviation
Recession -7% 17% 5.0% 0.0016
Normal 12% 7% 9.5% 0.0000
Boom 28% -3% 12.5% 0.0012
The variance of the rate of return on the two risky assets portfolio is
Rate of Return
Scenario Stock fund Bond fund Portfolio squared deviation
Recession -7% 17% 5.0% 0.0016
Normal 12% 7% 9.5% 0.0000
Boom 28% -3% 12.5% 0.0012
E (R Portfolio
) x E (R ) x E (R )
1 1 2 2
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Risk and Diversification
E (R Portfolio
)
n
i 1
( x i
E (R ) ( x E (R ) ( x E (R ) ...
i 1 1 2 2
( x E (R )
n n
( 7 .6 )
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Risk and Diversification
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Expected return - example
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Risk and Diversification
Cov(1,2)
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Risk and Diversification
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Covariance
Stock Bond
Scenario Deviation Deviation Product Weighted
Recession -18% 10% -0.0180 -0.0060
Normal 1% 0% 0.0000 0.0000
Boom 17% -10% -0.0170 -0.0057
Sum -0.0117
Covariance -0.0117
2 2 2 2 2
2 Asset Portfolio w
1 R1 w
2 R2 2w 1w 2 R1, 2
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Risk and Diversification
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Risk and Diversification
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Risk and Diversification
Limits of Diversification
When the number of assets in a portfolio is large, adding another stock has almost
no effect on the standard deviation of portfolio . Most risk-reduction from
diversification may be achieved with 15-20 assets
Diversification can virtually eliminate risk unique to individual assets, but the risk
common to all assets in the market remains
Firm-specific risk is, in effect, reduced to zero in a diversified portfolio but some
systematic risk remains.
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Total Risk in a Portfolio as the Number of Assets Increases
Exhibit 7.8
Risk and Diversification
Investors do not like risk and will not bear risk they can avoid by
diversification
• Well-diversified portfolios contain only systematic risk.
• Portfolios that are not well-diversified face systematic risk
plus unsystematic risk.
No one compensates investors for bearing unsystematic risk,
and investors will not accept risk that they are not paid to take.
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Risk and Diversification
2 2 2 2 2
2 Asset Portfolio x
1 R1 x
2 R2 2 x 1x 2 R1, 2
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Risk and Diversification
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Risk and Diversification
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Risk and Diversification
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Risk and Diversification
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Risk and Diversification
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Portfolio variance - example
Given our portfolio weights of 0.5 for both stocks and bonds, we have
all
the terms needed to solve for portfolio variance.
Portfolio variance = w2A*σ2(R A) + w2 B*σ2(R B) + 2*(wA )*(wB )*Cov(RA , RB
)
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An individual plans to invest in Stock A and Stock B. The expected
returns are 12% and 18% for Stocks A and B, respectively. The
standard deviations are 6% and 12% for Stocks A and B. The
correlation between A and B is .15. Find the expected return and the
standard deviation of a portfolio with 80% of the investor's funds in
Stock A.
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CHAPTER SUMMARY
1. Expected return
2. Realized return
3. Risk
4. Diversification
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