Asset Pricing Models Chapter 9

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Presentation transcript:

Asset Pricing Models Chapter 9 Charles P. Jones, Investments: Analysis and Management, Eleventh Edition, John Wiley & Sons

Capital Asset Pricing Model Focus on the equilibrium relationship between the risk and expected return on risky assets Builds on Markowitz portfolio theory Each investor is assumed to diversify his or her portfolio according to the Markowitz model

CAPM Assumptions All investors: Use the same information to generate an efficient frontier Have the same one- period time horizon Can borrow or lend money at the risk-free rate of return No transaction costs, no personal income taxes, no inflation No single investor can affect the price of a stock Capital markets are in equilibrium

Borrowing and Lending Possibilities Risk free assets Certain-to-be-earned expected return and a variance of return of zero No correlation with risky assets Usually proxied by a Treasury security Amount to be received at maturity is free of default risk, known with certainty Adding a risk-free asset extends and changes the efficient frontier

Risk-Free Lending Riskless assets can be combined with any portfolio in the efficient set AB Z implies lending Set of portfolios on line RF to T dominates all portfolios below it B A T E(R) RF L Z X Risk

Impact of Risk-Free Lending If wRF placed in a risk-free asset Expected portfolio return Risk of the portfolio Expected return and risk of the portfolio with lending is a weighted average

Borrowing Possibilities Investor no longer restricted to own wealth Interest paid on borrowed money Higher returns sought to cover expense Assume borrowing at RF Risk will increase as the amount of borrowing increases Financial leverage

The New Efficient Set Risk-free investing and borrowing creates a new set of expected return-risk possibilities Addition of risk-free asset results in A change in the efficient set from an arc to a straight line tangent to the feasible set without the riskless asset Chosen portfolio depends on investor’s risk-return preferences

Portfolio Choice The more conservative the investor the more is placed in risk-free lending and the less borrowing The more aggressive the investor the less is placed in risk-free lending and the more borrowing Most aggressive investors would use leverage to invest more in portfolio T

Market Portfolio Most important implication of the CAPM All investors hold the same optimal portfolio of risky assets The optimal portfolio is at the highest point of tangency between RF and the efficient frontier The portfolio of all risky assets is the optimal risky portfolio Called the market portfolio

Characteristics of the Market Portfolio All risky assets must be in portfolio, so it is completely diversified Includes only systematic risk All securities included in proportion to their market value Unobservable but proxied by S&P 500 Contains worldwide assets Financial and real assets