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Efficient Diversification

Bodie, Kane, and Marcus

Essentials of Investments Eleventh Edition

6

Chapter

6.1 Diversification and Portfolio Risk

Market/Systematic/Nondiversifiable Risk

Risk factors common to whole economy

Unique/Firm-Specific/Nonsystematic/ Diversifiable Risk

Risk that can be eliminated by diversification

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Figure 6.1 Risk as Function of Number of Stocks in Portfolio

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Figure 6.2 Risk versus Diversification

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6.2 Asset Allocation with Two Risky Assets

Covariance and Correlation

Portfolio risk depends on covariance between returns of assets

Expected return on two-security portfolio

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6.2 Asset Allocation with Two Risky Assets

Covariance Calculations

Correlation Coefficient

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Spreadsheet 6.1 Capital Market Expectations

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Spreadsheet 6.2 Variance of Returns

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Spreadsheet 6.3 Portfolio Performance

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Spreadsheet 6.4 Return Covariance

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6.2 Asset Allocation with Two Risky Assets

Using Historical Data

Variability/covariability change slowly over time

Use realized returns to estimate

Cannot estimate averages precisely

Focus for risk on deviations of returns from average value

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6.2 Asset Allocation with Two Risky Assets

RoR: Weighted average of returns on components, with investment proportions as weights

ERR: Weighted average of expected returns on components, with portfolio proportions as weights

Variance of RoR:

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6.2 Asset Allocation with Two Risky Assets

Risk-Return Trade-Off

Investment opportunity set

Available portfolio risk-return combinations

Mean-Variance Criterion

If E(rA) ≥ E(rB) and σA ≤ σB

Portfolio A dominates portfolio B

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Spreadsheet 6.5 Investment Opportunity Set

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Figure 6.3 Investment Opportunity Set

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Figure 6.4 Opportunity Sets: Various Correlation Coefficients

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Spreadsheet 6.6 Opportunity Set -Various Correlation Coefficients

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6.3 The Optimal Risky Portfolio with a Risk-Free Asset

Slope of CAL is Sharpe Ratio of Risky Portfolio

Optimal Risky Portfolio

Best combination of risky and safe assets to form portfolio

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6.3 The Optimal Risky Portfolio with a Risk-Free Asset

Calculating Optimal Risky Portfolio

Two risky assets

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Figure 6.5 Two Capital Allocation Lines

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Figure 6.6 Bond, Stock and T-Bill Optimal Allocation

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Figure 6.7 The Complete Portfolio

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Figure 6.8 Portfolio Composition: Asset Allocation Solution

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6.4 Efficient Diversification with Many Risky Assets

Efficient Frontier of Risky Assets

Graph representing set of portfolios that maximizes expected return at each level of portfolio risk

Three methods

Maximize risk premium for any level standard deviation

Minimize standard deviation for any level risk premium

Maximize Sharpe ratio for any standard deviation or risk premium

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Figure 6.9 Portfolios Constructed with Three Stocks

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Figure 6.10 Efficient Frontier: Risky and Individual Assets

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6.4 Efficient Diversification with Many Risky Assets

Choosing Optimal Risky Portfolio

Optimal portfolio CAL tangent to efficient frontier

Separation Property implies portfolio choice, separated into two tasks

Determination of optimal risky portfolio

Personal choice of best mix of risky portfolio and risk-free asset

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6.4 Efficient Diversification with Many Risky Assets

Optimal Risky Portfolio: Illustration

Efficiently diversified global portfolio using stock market indices of six countries

Standard deviation and correlation estimated from historical data

Risk premium forecast generated from fundamental analysis

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Figure 6.11 Efficient Frontiers/CAL: Table 6.1

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6.5 A Single-Index Stock Market

Index model

Relates stock returns to returns on broad market index & firm-specific factors

Excess return

RoR in excess of risk-free rate

Beta

Sensitivity of security’s returns to market factor

Firm-specific or residual risk

Component of return variance independent of market factor

Alpha

Stock’s expected return beyond that induced by market index

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6.5 A Single-Index Stock Market

Excess Return

Where:

: component of return due to movements in overall market

: security’s responsiveness to market

: stock’s expected excess return if market factor is neutral, i.e. market-index excess return is zero

: Component attributable to unexpected events relevant only to this security (firm-specific)

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6.5 A Single-Index Stock Market

Statistical and Graphical Representation of Single-Index Model

Security Characteristic Line (SCL)

Plot of security’s predicted excess return from excess return of market

Algebraic representation of regression line

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6.5 A Single-Index Stock Market

Statistical and Graphical Representation of Single-Index Model

Ratio of systematic variance to total variance

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Figure 6.12 Scatter Diagram for Ford

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Figure 6.13 Various Scatter Diagrams

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6.5 A Single-Index Stock Market

Diversification in Single-Index Security Market

In portfolio of n securities with weights

In securities with nonsystematic risk

Nonsystematic portion of portfolio return

Portfolio nonsystematic variance

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6.5 A Single-Index Stock Market

Using Security Analysis with Index Model

In

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CAPM and APT

Bodie, Kane, and Marcus

Essentials of Investments Eleventh Edition

7

Chapter

7.1 The Capital Asset Pricing Model

Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM)

Security’s required rate of return relates to systematic risk measured by beta

Market Portfolio (M)

Each security held in proportion to market value

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7.1 The Capital Asset Pricing Model: Assumptions

Market Assumptions Investor Assumptions
All investors are price takers Investors plan for the same (single-period) horizon
All information relevant to security analysis is free and publicly available. Investors are efficient users of analytical methods  investors have homogeneous expectations.
All securities are publicly owned and traded. Investors are rational, mean-variance optimizers.
No taxes on investment returns.
No transaction costs.
Lending and borrowing at the same risk-free rate are unlimited.

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7.1 The Capital Asset Pricing Model

Hypothetical Equilibrium

All investors choose to hold market portfolio

Market portfolio is on efficient frontier, optimal risky portfolio

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7.1 The Capital Asset Pricing Model

Hypothetical Equilibrium

Risk premium on market portfolio is proportional to variance of market portfolio and investor’s risk aversion

Risk premium on individual assets

Proportional to risk premium on market portfolio

Proportional to beta coefficient of security on market portfolio

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Figure 7.1 Efficient Frontier and Capital Market Line

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7.1 The Capital Asset Pricing Model

Passive Strategy is Efficient

Mutual fund theorem: All investors desire same portfolio of risky assets, can be satisfied by single mutual fund composed of that portfolio

If passive strategy is costless and efficient, why follow active strategy?

If no one does security analysis, what brings about efficiency of market portfolio?

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7.1 The Capital Asset Pricing Model

Risk Premium of Market Portfolio

Demand drives prices, lowers expected rate of return/risk premiums

When premiums fall, investors move funds into risk-free asset

Equilibrium risk premium of market portfolio proportional to

Risk of market

Risk aversion of average investor

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7.1 The Capital Asset Pricing Model

Expected Returns on Individual Securities

Expected return-beta relationship

Implication of CAPM that security risk premiums (expected excess returns) will be proportional to beta

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7.1 The Capital Asset Pricing Model

The Security Market Line (SML)

Represents expected return-beta relationship of CAPM

Graphs individual asset risk premiums as function of asset risk

Alpha

Abnormal rate of return on security in excess of that predicted by equilibrium model (CAPM)

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Figure 7.2 The SML and a Positive-Alpha Stock

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7.1 The Capital Asset Pricing Model

Applications of CAPM

Use SML as benchmark for fair return on risky asset

SML provides “hurdle rate” for internal projects

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7.2 CAPM and Index Models

Index Model, Realized Returns, Mean-Beta Equation

: HPR

i: Asset

t: Period

: Intercept of security characteristic line

: Slope of security characteristic line

: Index return

: Firm-specific effects

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7.2 CAPM and Index Models

Estimating Index Model

, excess return

Residual = Actual return Predicted return for Google

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7.2 CAPM and Index Models: SCL

Security Characteristic Line (SCL)

Plot of security’s expected excess return over risk-free rate as function of excess return on market

Required rate = Risk-free rate + β x Expected excess return of index

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7.2 CAPM and Index Models

Predicting Betas

Mean reversion

Betas move towards mean over time

To predict future betas, adjust estimates from historical data to account for regression towards 1.0

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7.3 CAPM and the Real World

CAPM is false based on validity of its assumptions

Useful predictor of expected returns

Untestable as a theory

Principles still valid

Investors should diversify

Systematic risk is the risk that matters

Well-diversified risky portfolio can be suitable for wide range of investors

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7.4 Multifactor Models and CAPM

Multifactor models

Models of security returns that respond to several systematic factors

Two-index portfolio in realized returns

Two-factor SML

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7.4 Multifactor Models and CAPM

Fama-French Three-Factor Model

Estimation results

Three aspects of successful specification

Higher adjusted R-square

Lower residual SD

Smaller value of alpha

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