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Efficient Diversification CHAPTER 6. Diversification and Portfolio Risk Market risk –Systematic or Nondiversifiable Firm-specific risk –Diversifiable.

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Presentation on theme: "Efficient Diversification CHAPTER 6. Diversification and Portfolio Risk Market risk –Systematic or Nondiversifiable Firm-specific risk –Diversifiable."— Presentation transcript:

1 Efficient Diversification CHAPTER 6

2 Diversification and Portfolio Risk Market risk –Systematic or Nondiversifiable Firm-specific risk –Diversifiable or nonsystematic

3 Figure 6.1 Portfolio Risk as a Function of the Number of Stocks

4 Figure 6.2 Portfolio Risk as a Function of Number of Securities

5 Two Asset Portfolio Return – Stock and Bond

6 Covariance  1,2 = Correlation coefficient of returns  1,2 = Correlation coefficient of returns Cov(r 1 r 2 ) =    1  2  1 = Standard deviation of returns for Security 1  2 = Standard deviation of returns for Security 2  1 = Standard deviation of returns for Security 1  2 = Standard deviation of returns for Security 2

7 Correlation Coefficients: Possible Values If  = 1.0, the securities would be perfectly positively correlated If  = - 1.0, the securities would be perfectly negatively correlated Range of values for  1,2 -1.0 <  < 1.0

8 Two Asset Portfolio St Dev – Stock and Bond

9 r p = Weighted average of the n securities r p = Weighted average of the n securities  p 2 = (Consider all pair-wise covariance measures)  p 2 = (Consider all pair-wise covariance measures) In General, For an n- Security Portfolio:

10 Numerical Example: Bond and Stock Returns Bond = 6%Stock = 10% Standard Deviation Bond = 12%Stock = 25% Weights Bond =.5Stock =.5 Correlation Coefficient (Bonds and Stock) = 0

11 Return and Risk for Example Return = 8%.5(6) +.5 (10) Standard Deviation = 13.87% [(.5) 2 (12) 2 + (.5) 2 (25) 2 + … 2 (.5) (.5) (12) (25) (0)] ½ [192.25] ½ = 13.87

12 Figure 6.3 Investment Opportunity Set for Stock and Bonds

13 Figure 6.4 Investment Opportunity Set for Stock and Bonds with Various Correlations

14 Figure 6.3 Investment Opportunity Set for Bond and Stock Funds

15 Extending to Include Riskless Asset The optimal combination becomes linear A single combination of risky and riskless assets will dominate

16 Figure 6.5 Opportunity Set Using Stock and Bonds and Two Capital Allocation Lines

17 Dominant CAL with a Risk-Free Investment (F) CAL(O) dominates other lines -- it has the best risk/return or the largest slope Slope = (E(R) - Rf) /   E(R P ) - R f ) /  P   E(R A ) - R f ) /    Regardless of risk preferences combinations of O & F dominate

18 Figure 6.6 Optimal Capital Allocation Line for Bonds, Stocks and T-Bills

19 Figure 6.7 The Complete Portfolio

20 Figure 6.8 The Complete Portfolio – Solution to the Asset Allocation Problem

21 Extending Concepts to All Securities The optimal combinations result in lowest level of risk for a given return The optimal trade-off is described as the efficient frontier These portfolios are dominant

22 Figure 6.9 Portfolios Constructed from Three Stocks A, B and C

23 Figure 6.10 The Efficient Frontier of Risky Assets and Individual Assets

24 Single Factor Model r i = E(R i ) + ß i F + e ß i = index of a securities ’ particular return to the factor F= some macro factor; in this case F is unanticipated movement; F is commonly related to security returns Assumption: a broad market index like the S&P500 is the common factor

25 Single Index Model Risk Prem Market Risk Prem or Index Risk Prem or Index Risk Prem i = the stock’s expected return if the market’s excess return is zero market’s excess return is zero ß i (r m - r f ) = the component of return due to movements in the market index movements in the market index (r m - r f ) = 0 e i = firm specific component, not due to market movements movements   e rrrr i fm i i fi   

26 Let: R i = (r i - r f ) R m = (r m - r f ) R m = (r m - r f ) Risk premium format R i =  i + ß i (R m ) + e i Risk Premium Format

27 Figure 6.11 Scatter Diagram for Dell

28 Figure 6.12 Various Scatter Diagrams

29 Components of Risk Market or systematic risk: risk related to the macro economic factor or market index Unsystematic or firm specific risk: risk not related to the macro factor or market index Total risk = Systematic + Unsystematic

30 Measuring Components of Risk  i 2 =  i 2  m 2 +  2 (e i ) where;  i 2 = total variance  i 2  m 2 = systematic variance  2 (e i ) = unsystematic variance

31 Total Risk = Systematic Risk + Unsystematic Risk Systematic Risk/Total Risk =  2 ß i 2  m 2 /  2 =  2  i 2  m 2 /  i 2  m 2 +  2 (e i ) =  2 Examining Percentage of Variance

32 Advantages of the Single Index Model Reduces the number of inputs for diversification Easier for security analysts to specialize


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