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1 CHAPTER 6 Risk, Return, & the Capital Asset Pricing Model.

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1 1 CHAPTER 6 Risk, Return, & the Capital Asset Pricing Model

2 2 Topics in Chapter Basic return concepts Basic risk concepts Stand-alone risk Portfolio (market) risk Risk and return: CAPM/SML

3 Value = + + + FCF 1 FCF 2 FCF ∞ (1 + WACC) 1 (1 + WACC) ∞ (1 + WACC) 2 Free cash flow (FCF) Market interest rates Firm’s business riskMarket risk aversion Firm’s debt/equity mix Cost of debt Cost of equity Weighted average cost of capital (WACC) Net operating profit after taxes Required investments in operating capital − = Determinants of Intrinsic Value: The Cost of Equity...

4 > Risk, > Return, (both + & -) Stand – Alone RiskRisk in Portfolio Context b. Market Risk Quantified by Beta & used in CAPM: Capital Asset Pricing Model Relationship b/w market risk & required return as depicted in SML Req’d return = Risk-free return + Mrkt risk Prem(Beta) SML: r i = r RF + (R M - r RF )b i a. Diversifiable

5 5 What are investment returns? Investment returns measure financial results of an investment. Returns may be historical or prospective (anticipated). Returns can be expressed in: ($) dollar terms. (%) percentage terms.

6 6 An investment costs $1,000 and is sold after 1 year for $1,100. Dollar return: Percentage return: $ Received - $ Invested $1,100 - $1,000 = $100 $ Return/$ Invested $100/$1,000 = 0.10 = 10%

7 7 What is investment risk? Typically, investment returns are not known with certainty. Investment risk pertains to the probability of earning a return less than expected. Greater the chance of a return far below the expected return, greater the risk.

8 Risk & Return Student Sue Student Bob Exam 1 70% Exam 2 80% X weight X 50% X wt. X 50% ----------- Final grade = 75 % Exam 1 x weight 50% x.50 Exam 2 x wt 100% x.50 ------- Final grade = 75 %

9 9 Probability Distribution: Which stock is riskier? Why?

10 WedTech Co Normal 40% Return 20% =.08 Bad 30% Return 5% =.015 Good 30% Return 35% =.105 =Expected ave return = 20%

11 WedTech Co Standard Deviation: Measure of stand- alone risk Return-Exp Ret = Diff 2 x Prob = Variance: SD:

12 Standard Deviation and Normal Distributions 1 SD = 68.26% likelihood 2 SD = 95.46% 3 SD = 99.74%

13 WedTech Co vs. IBM

14 14 Stand-Alone Risk Standard deviation measures the stand- alone risk of an investment. The larger the standard deviation, the higher the probability that returns will be far below the expected return.

15 WedTech Co & IBM in 2 stock Portfolio Ave Portfolio Return Portfolio Standard Deviation

16 WedTech Co & IBM & adding other stocks to Portfolio IBMWedTech CokeMicrosoft

17 Historical Risk vs. Return Return: Hi – Lo Small Co stock Large Co Stock LT Corp Bonds LT Treasuries ST T-Bills Risk: Hi - Lo

18 Reward-to-Variabilty Ratio (Sharpe’s) Portfolio’s average return in excess of risk- free rate divided by standard deviation

19 Comparing Different Stocks Coefficient of Variation: = S.D. / Return; or Risk / Return WalMart vs. Philip Morris 12% Return 12% S.D. = C.V. =

20 20 Expected Return versus Coefficient of Variation Security Expected Return Risk:  Risk: CV Alta Inds 17.4% 20.0%1.1 Market 15.0 15.31.0 Am. Foam 13.8 18.81.4 T-bills 8.0 0.0 Repo Men 1.7 13.47.9

21 Comparing Different Stocks Correlation coefficient = r (rho): Measures tendency of 2 variables to move together. Rho (r) = 1 = perfect + correlation & variables move together in unison. Does not help with diversification See text figures 6-9 thru 6-11

22 22 Two-Stock Portfolios Two stocks can be combined to form a riskless portfolio if  = -1.0. Risk is not reduced at all if the two stocks have  = +1.0. In general, stocks have  ≈ 0.35, so risk is lowered but not eliminated. Investors typically hold many stocks. What happens when  = 0?

23 23 Adding Stocks to a Portfolio What would happen to the risk of an average 1-stock portfolio as more randomly selected stocks were added?  p would decrease because the added stocks would not be perfectly correlated, but the expected portfolio return would remain relatively constant.

24 24   stock ≈ 35%  Many stocks ≈ 20%

25 25 102030 40 2,000 stocks Company Specific (Diversifiable) Risk Market Risk 20% 0 Stand-Alone Risk,  p pp 35% Risk vs. Number of Stock in Portfolio

26 26 Stand-alone risk = Market risk + Diversifiable risk Market risk is that part of a security’s stand-alone risk that cannot be eliminated by diversification. Firm-specific, or diversifiable, risk is that part of a security’s stand-alone risk that can be eliminated by diversification.

27 27 Conclusions As more stocks are added, each new stock has a smaller risk-reducing impact on the portfolio.  p falls very slowly after about 40 stocks are included. The lower limit for  p is about 20% =  M. By forming well-diversified portfolios, investors can eliminate about half the risk of owning a single stock.

28 28 Can an investor holding one stock earn a return commensurate with its risk? No. Rational investors will minimize risk by holding portfolios. They bear only market risk, so prices and returns reflect this lower risk. The one-stock investor bears higher (stand-alone) risk, so the return is less than that required by the risk.

29 29 How is market risk measured for individual securities? Market risk, which is relevant for stocks held in well-diversified portfolios, is defined as the contribution of a security to the overall riskiness of the portfolio. It is measured by a stock’s beta coefficient. For stock i, its beta is: b i = (  i,M  i ) /  M

30 30 How are betas calculated? In addition to measuring a stock’s contribution of risk to a portfolio, beta also measures the stock’s volatility relative to the market.

31 31 Using a Regression to Estimate Beta Run a regression with returns on the stock in question plotted on the Y axis and returns on the market portfolio plotted on the X axis. The slope of the regression line, which measures relative volatility, is defined as the stock’s beta coefficient, or b.

32 32 Use the historical stock returns to calculate the beta for PQU. YearMarketPQU 1 25.7% 40.0% 2 8.0%-15.0% 3-11.0%-15.0% 4 15.0% 35.0% 5 32.5% 10.0% 6 13.7% 30.0% 7 40.0% 42.0% 8 10.0%-10.0% 9-10.8%-25.0% 10-13.1% 25.0%

33 33 Calculating Beta for PQU

34 Beta & PQU Co. Beta reflects slope of line via regression y = mx + b m=slope + b= y intercept R pqu = 0.8308 r M + 0.0256 So, PQU’s beta is.8308 & y-intercept @ 2.56%

35 Beta & PQU Co. & R 2 R 2 measures degree of dispersion about regression line (ie – measures % of variance explained by regression equation) PQU’s R 2 of.3546 means about 35% of PQU’s returns are explained by the market returns (32% for a typical stock) R 2 of.95 on portfolio of 40 randomly selected stocks would reflect a regression line with points tightly clustered to it.

36 36 Two-Stock Portfolios Two stocks can be combined to form a riskless portfolio if  = -1.0. Risk is not reduced at all if the two stocks have  = +1.0. In general, stocks have  ≈ 0.35, so risk is lowered but not eliminated. Investors typically hold many stocks. What happens when  = 0?

37 37 Adding Stocks to a Portfolio What would happen to the risk of an average 1-stock portfolio as more randomly selected stocks were added?  p would decrease because the added stocks would not be perfectly correlated, but the expected portfolio return would remain relatively constant.

38 38   stock ≈ 35%  Many stocks ≈ 20%

39 39 102030 40 2,000 stocks Company Specific (Diversifiable) Risk Market Risk 20% 0 Stand-Alone Risk,  p pp 35% Risk vs. Number of Stock in Portfolio

40 40 Stand-alone risk = Market risk + Diversifiable risk Market risk is that part of a security’s stand-alone risk that cannot be eliminated by diversification. Firm-specific, or diversifiable, risk is that part of a security’s stand-alone risk that can be eliminated by diversification.

41 41 Conclusions As more stocks are added, each new stock has a smaller risk-reducing impact on the portfolio.  p falls very slowly after about 40 stocks are included. The lower limit for  p is about 20% =  M. By forming well-diversified portfolios, investors can eliminate about half the risk of owning a single stock.

42 42 Can an investor holding one stock earn a return commensurate with its risk? No. Rational investors will minimize risk by holding portfolios. They bear only market risk, so prices and returns reflect this lower risk. The one-stock investor bears higher (stand-alone) risk, so the return is less than that required by the risk.

43 43 How is market risk measured for individual securities? Market risk, which is relevant for stocks held in well-diversified portfolios, is defined as the contribution of a security to the overall riskiness of the portfolio. It is measured by a stock’s beta coefficient. For stock i, its beta is: b i = (  i,M  i ) /  M

44 44 How are betas calculated? In addition to measuring a stock’s contribution of risk to a portfolio, beta also measures the stock’s volatility relative to the market.

45 45 Using a Regression to Estimate Beta Run a regression with returns on the stock in question plotted on the Y axis and returns on the market portfolio plotted on the X axis. The slope of the regression line, which measures relative volatility, is defined as the stock’s beta coefficient, or b.

46 46 Use the historical stock returns to calculate the beta for PQU. YearMarketPQU 1 25.7% 40.0% 2 8.0%-15.0% 3-11.0%-15.0% 4 15.0% 35.0% 5 32.5% 10.0% 6 13.7% 30.0% 7 40.0% 42.0% 8 10.0%-10.0% 9-10.8%-25.0% 10-13.1% 25.0%

47 47 Calculating Beta for PQU

48 48 Expected Return versus Market Risk: Which investment is best? Security Expected Return (%)Risk, b Alta 17.4 1.29 Market 15.0 1.00 Am. Foam 13.8 0.68 T-bills 8.0 0.00 Repo Men 1.7 -0.86

49 49 Capital Asset Pricing Model The Security Market Line (SML) is part of the Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM). Return = Risk Free + Beta (RetMrkt –Rf) SML: r i = r RF + (RP M )b i. Assume r RF = 8%; r M = r M = 15%. RP M = (r M - r RF ) = 15% - 8% = 7%.

50 50 Use the SML to calculate each alternative’s required return. The Security Market Line (SML) is part of the Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM). SML: r i = r RF + (RP M )b i. Assume r RF = 8%; r M = r M = 15%. RP M = (r M - r RF ) = 15% - 8% = 7%.

51 51 Required Rates of Return r Alta = 8.0% + (7%)(1.29) = 17%. r M = 8.0% + (7%)(1.00) = 15.0%. r Am. F. = 8.0% + (7%)(0.68) = 12.8%. r T-bill = 8.0% + (7%)(0.00) = 8.0%. r Repo = 8.0% + (7%)(-0.86) = 2.0%.

52 52 Expected versus Required Returns (%) Exp.Req. rr Alta 17.4 17.0 Undervalued Market 15.0 Fairly valued Am. Foam 13.8 12.8 Undervalued T-bills 8.0 Fairly valued Repo 1.7 2.0 Overvalued

53 53 SML: r i = r RF + (RP M ) b i r i = 8% + (7%) b i.. Repo. Alta T-bills. Am. Foam r M = 15 r RF = 8 -1 0 1 2. r i (%) Risk, b i Market

54 54 Calculate beta for a portfolio with 50% Alta and 50% Repo b p = Weighted average = 0.5(b Alta ) + 0.5(b Repo ) = 0.5(1.29) + 0.5(-0.86) = 0.22.

55 55 Required Return on the Alta/Repo Portfolio? r p = Weighted average r = 0.5(17%) + 0.5(2%) = 9.5%. Or use SML: r p = r RF + (RP M ) b p = 8.0% + 7%(0.22) = 9.5%.

56 56 SML 1 Original situation r (%) SML 2 00.5 1.01.5 Risk, b i 18 15 11 8 New SML  I = 3% Impact of Inflation Change on SML

57 57 SML 1 Original situation r (%) SML 2 After change Risk, b i 18 15 8 1.0  RP M = 3% Impact of Risk Aversion Change

58 58 Has the CAPM been completely confirmed or refuted? No. The statistical tests have problems that make empirical verification or rejection virtually impossible. Investors’ required returns are based on future risk, but betas are calculated with historical data. Investors may be concerned about both stand-alone and market risk.

59 Below are per book mini-case

60 60 Consider the Following Investment Alternatives Econ.Prob.T-BillAltaRepoAm F.MP Bust 0.108.0%-22.0% 28.0% 10.0%-13.0% Below avg. 0.208.0 -2.0 14.7-10.0 1.0 Avg. 0.408.0 20.0 0.0 7.0 15.0 Above avg. 0.20 8.0 35.0-10.0 45.0 29.0 Boom 0.10 8.0 50.0-20.0 30.0 43.0 1.00

61 61 What is unique about T-bill returns? T-bill returns 8% regardless of the state of the economy. Is T-bill riskless? Explain.

62 62 Alta Inds. and Repo Men vs. Economy Alta moves with economy, so it is positively correlated with economy. This is typical Repo Men moves counter to economy. Such negative correlation is unusual.

63 63 Calculate the expected rate of return on each alternative. r = expected rate of return (think wtd average) r Alta = 0.10(-22%) + 0.20(-2%) + 0.40(20%) + 0.20(35%) + 0.10(50%) = 17.4%. ^ ^ n ∑ r = ^ i=1 riPi.riPi.

64 64 Alta has the highest rate of return. Does that make it best? Expected return Alta 17.4% Market15.0 Am. Foam13.8 T-bill 8.0 Repo Men 1.7

65 65 What is the standard deviation of returns for each alternative? σ = Standard deviation σ = √ Variance = √ σ 2 n ∑ i=1 = √ (r i – r) 2 P i. ^

66 66  = [(-22 - 17.4) 2 0.10 + (-2 - 17.4) 2 0.20 + (20 - 17.4) 2 0.40 + (35 - 17.4) 2 0.20 + (50 - 17.4) 2 0.10] 1/2 = 20.0%. Standard Deviation of Alta Industries

67 67  T-bills = 0.0%.  Alta = 20.0%.  Repo = 13.4%.  Am Foam = 18.8%.  Market = 15.3%. Standard Deviation of Alternatives

68 68 Expected Return versus Risk Security Expected Return Risk,  Alta Inds. 17.4% 20.0% Market 15.0 15.3 Am. Foam 13.8 18.8 T-bills 8.0 0.0 Repo Men 1.7 13.4

69 69 Coefficient of Variation (CV) CV = Standard deviation / Expected return CVT-BILLS = 0.0% / 8.0% = 0.0. CVAlta Inds = 20.0% / 17.4% = 1.1. CVRepo Men = 13.4% / 1.7% = 7.9. CVAm. Foam = 18.8% / 13.8% = 1.4. CVM = 15.3% / 15.0% = 1.0.

70 70 Expected Return versus Coefficient of Variation Security Expected Return Risk:  Risk: CV Alta Inds 17.4% 20.0%1.1 Market 15.0 15.31.0 Am. Foam 13.8 18.81.4 T-bills 8.0 0.0 Repo Men 1.7 13.47.9

71 71 Return vs. Risk (Std. Dev.): Which investment is best?

72 72 Portfolio Risk and Return Assume a two-stock portfolio with $50,000 in Alta Inds. and $50,000 in Repo Men. Calculate r p and  p. ^

73 73 Portfolio Expected Return r p = Σ w i r i r p is a weighted average (w i is % of portfolio in stock i): r p = 0.5(17.4%) + 0.5(1.7%) = 9.6%. ^ ^ ^^ n i = 1

74 74 Alternative Method: Find portfolio return in each economic state EconomyProb.AltaRepo Port.= 0.5(Alta) + 0.5(Repo) Bust 0.10-22.0% 28.0% 3.0% Below avg. 0.20 -2.0 14.7 6.4 Average 0.40 20.0 0.0 10.0 Above avg. 0.20 35.0 -10.0 12.5 Boom 0.10 50.0 -20.0 15.0

75 75 Use portfolio outcomes to estimate risk and expected return r p = (3.0%)0.10 + (6.4%)0.20 + (10.0%)0.40 + (12.5%)0.20 + (15.0%)0.10 = 9.6% ^  p = ((3.0 - 9.6) 2 0.10 + (6.4 - 9.6) 2 0.20 +(10.0 - 9.6) 2 0.40 + (12.5 - 9.6) 2 0.20 + (15.0 - 9.6) 2 0.10) 1/2 = 3.3% CV p = 3.3%/9.6% =.34

76 76 Portfolio vs. Its Components Portfolio expected return (9.6%) is between Alta (17.4%) and Repo (1.7%) returns. Portfolio standard deviation is much lower than: either stock (20% and 13.4%). average of Alta and Repo (16.7%). The reason is due to negative correlation (  ) between Alta and Repo returns.

77 77 Two-Stock Portfolios Two stocks can be combined to form a riskless portfolio if  = -1.0. Risk is not reduced at all if the two stocks have  = +1.0. In general, stocks have  ≈ 0.35, so risk is lowered but not eliminated. Investors typically hold many stocks. What happens when  = 0?

78 78 Adding Stocks to a Portfolio What would happen to the risk of an average 1-stock portfolio as more randomly selected stocks were added?  p would decrease because the added stocks would not be perfectly correlated, but the expected portfolio return would remain relatively constant.

79 79   stock ≈ 35%  Many stocks ≈ 20%

80 80 102030 40 2,000 stocks Company Specific (Diversifiable) Risk Market Risk 20% 0 Stand-Alone Risk,  p pp 35% Risk vs. Number of Stock in Portfolio

81 81 Stand-alone risk = Market risk + Diversifiable risk Market risk is that part of a security’s stand-alone risk that cannot be eliminated by diversification. Firm-specific, or diversifiable, risk is that part of a security’s stand-alone risk that can be eliminated by diversification.

82 82 Conclusions As more stocks are added, each new stock has a smaller risk-reducing impact on the portfolio.  p falls very slowly after about 40 stocks are included. The lower limit for  p is about 20% =  M. By forming well-diversified portfolios, investors can eliminate about half the risk of owning a single stock.

83 83 Can an investor holding one stock earn a return commensurate with its risk? No. Rational investors will minimize risk by holding portfolios. They bear only market risk, so prices and returns reflect this lower risk. The one-stock investor bears higher (stand-alone) risk, so the return is less than that required by the risk.

84 84 How is market risk measured for individual securities? Market risk, which is relevant for stocks held in well-diversified portfolios, is defined as the contribution of a security to the overall riskiness of the portfolio. It is measured by a stock’s beta coefficient. For stock i, its beta is: b i = (  i,M  i ) /  M

85 85 How are betas calculated? In addition to measuring a stock’s contribution of risk to a portfolio, beta also measures the stock’s volatility relative to the market.

86 86 Using a Regression to Estimate Beta Run a regression with returns on the stock in question plotted on the Y axis and returns on the market portfolio plotted on the X axis. The slope of the regression line, which measures relative volatility, is defined as the stock’s beta coefficient, or b.

87 87 Use the historical stock returns to calculate the beta for PQU. YearMarketPQU 1 25.7% 40.0% 2 8.0%-15.0% 3-11.0%-15.0% 4 15.0% 35.0% 5 32.5% 10.0% 6 13.7% 30.0% 7 40.0% 42.0% 8 10.0%-10.0% 9-10.8%-25.0% 10-13.1% 25.0%

88 88 Calculating Beta for PQU

89 89 What is beta for PQU? The regression line, and hence beta, can be found using a calculator with a regression function or a spreadsheet program. In this example, b = 0.83.

90 90 Calculating Beta in Practice Many analysts use the S&P 500 to find the market return. Analysts typically use four or five years’ of monthly returns to establish the regression line. Some analysts use 52 weeks of weekly returns.

91 91 How is beta interpreted? If b = 1.0, stock has average risk. If b > 1.0, stock is riskier than average. If b < 1.0, stock is less risky than average. Most stocks have betas in the range of 0.5 to 1.5. Can a stock have a negative beta?

92 92 Other Web Sites for Beta Go to http://finance.yahoo.com Enter the ticker symbol for a “Stock Quote”, such as IBM or Dell, then click GO. When the quote comes up, select Key Statistics from panel on left.

93 93 Expected Return versus Market Risk: Which investment is best? Security Expected Return (%)Risk, b Alta 17.4 1.29 Market 15.0 1.00 Am. Foam 13.8 0.68 T-bills 8.0 0.00 Repo Men 1.7 -0.86

94 94 Use the SML to calculate each alternative’s required return. The Security Market Line (SML) is part of the Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM). SML: r i = r RF + (RP M )b i. Assume r RF = 8%; r M = r M = 15%. RP M = (r M - r RF ) = 15% - 8% = 7%.

95 95 Required Rates of Return r Alta = 8.0% + (7%)(1.29) = 17%. r M = 8.0% + (7%)(1.00) = 15.0%. r Am. F. = 8.0% + (7%)(0.68) = 12.8%. r T-bill = 8.0% + (7%)(0.00) = 8.0%. r Repo = 8.0% + (7%)(-0.86) = 2.0%.

96 96 Expected versus Required Returns (%) Exp.Req. rr Alta 17.4 17.0 Undervalued Market 15.0 Fairly valued Am. Foam 13.8 12.8 Undervalued T-bills 8.0 Fairly valued Repo 1.7 2.0 Overvalued

97 97 SML: r i = r RF + (RP M ) b i r i = 8% + (7%) b i.. Repo. Alta T-bills. Am. Foam r M = 15 r RF = 8 -1 0 1 2. r i (%) Risk, b i Market

98 98 Calculate beta for a portfolio with 50% Alta and 50% Repo b p = Weighted average = 0.5(b Alta ) + 0.5(b Repo ) = 0.5(1.29) + 0.5(-0.86) = 0.22.

99 99 Required Return on the Alta/Repo Portfolio? r p = Weighted average r = 0.5(17%) + 0.5(2%) = 9.5%. Or use SML: r p = r RF + (RP M ) b p = 8.0% + 7%(0.22) = 9.5%.

100 100 SML 1 Original situation r (%) SML 2 00.5 1.01.5 Risk, b i 18 15 11 8 New SML  I = 3% Impact of Inflation Change on SML

101 101 SML 1 Original situation r (%) SML 2 After change Risk, b i 18 15 8 1.0  RP M = 3% Impact of Risk Aversion Change

102 102 Has the CAPM been completely confirmed or refuted? No. The statistical tests have problems that make empirical verification or rejection virtually impossible. Investors’ required returns are based on future risk, but betas are calculated with historical data. Investors may be concerned about both stand-alone and market risk.


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