Chapter 4. Investment Return and Risk

Similar documents
CHAPTER 4: ANSWERS TO CONCEPTS IN REVIEW

An investment s return is your reward for investing. An investment s risk is the uncertainty of what will happen with your investment dollar.

Rationale. Learning about return and risk from the historical record and beta estimation. T Bills and Inflation

CHAPTER 1 AN OVERVIEW OF THE INVESTMENT PROCESS

Where Vami 0 = 1000 and Where R N = Return for period N. Vami N = ( 1 + R N ) Vami N-1. Where R I = Return for period I. Average Return = ( S R I ) N

Risks and Rate of Return

CHAPTER 1 THE INVESTMENT SETTING

Mathematics of Time Value

CHAPTER 1 A Brief History of Risk and Return

Principles of Finance Risk and Return. Instructor: Xiaomeng Lu

CHAPTER 5. Introduction to Risk, Return, and the Historical Record INVESTMENTS BODIE, KANE, MARCUS. McGraw-Hill/Irwin

RETURN AND RISK: The Capital Asset Pricing Model

CHAPTER 8 Risk and Rates of Return

Rationale Reference Nattawut Jenwittayaroje, Ph.D., CFA Expected Return and Standard Deviation Example: Ending Price =

Solutions to the problems in the supplement are found at the end of the supplement

Define risk, risk aversion, and riskreturn

Measuring Interest Rates

Solutions to Problems

Savings and Investment. July 23, 2014

600 Solved MCQs of MGT201 BY

Fin 3710 Investment Analysis Professor Rui Yao CHAPTER 5: RISK AND RETURN

4. D Spread to treasuries. Spread to treasuries is a measure of a corporate bond s default risk.

MGT201 Financial Management Solved MCQs

MGT201 Financial Management Solved MCQs A Lot of Solved MCQS in on file

Capital Budgeting-Part II

Quiz Bomb (From Business Finance)

Risk and Return - Capital Market Theory. Chapter 8

Risk and Return - Capital Market Theory. Chapter 8

CITY OF SANIBEL TREASURY INVESTMENT PERFORMANCE PERIOD ENDING JUNE 30, 2011

AN INTRODUCTION TO RISK AND RETURN. Chapter 7

INVESTMENT CRITERIA. Net Present Value (NPV)

Lecture #2. YTM / YTC / YTW IRR concept VOLATILITY Vs RETURN Relationship. Risk Premium over the Standard Deviation of portfolio excess return

CHAPTER 5. Introduction to Risk, Return, and the Historical Record INVESTMENTS BODIE, KANE, MARCUS. McGraw-Hill/Irwin

Net Present Value Q: Suppose we can invest $50 today & receive $60 later today. What is our increase in value? Net Present Value Suppose we can invest

Ch. 8 Risk and Rates of Return. Return, Risk and Capital Market. Investment returns

Chapter Organization. The future value (FV) is the cash value of. an investment at some time in the future.

EC7092: Investment Management


Question # 1 of 15 ( Start time: 01:53:35 PM ) Total Marks: 1

Answers to Concepts in Review

Risk and Return: Past and Prologue

Copyright 2009 Pearson Education Canada

Risk and Return: Past and Prologue

Risk and Return. Return. Risk. M. En C. Eduardo Bustos Farías

Capital Budgeting Decision Methods

FNCE 5610, Personal Finance H Guy Williams, 2009

All In One MGT201 Mid Term Papers More Than (10) BY

CHAPTER 5. Introduction to Risk, Return, and the Historical Record INVESTMENTS BODIE, KANE, MARCUS

Financial Management Warsaw School of Economics

Introduction This note gives an introduction to the concept of relative valuation using market comparables. Relative valuation is the predominate meth

Chapter 6 Efficient Diversification. b. Calculation of mean return and variance for the stock fund: (A) (B) (C) (D) (E) (F) (G)

CHAPTER 6: RISK AVERSION AND CAPITAL ALLOCATION TO RISKY ASSETS

80 Solved MCQs of MGT201 Financial Management By

Chapter 10: Capital Markets and the Pricing of Risk

Chapter 11. Return and Risk: The Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM) Copyright 2013 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

Essential Performance Metrics to Evaluate and Interpret Investment Returns. Wealth Management Services

CHAPTER 9: THE CAPITAL ASSET PRICING MODEL

Capital Budgeting Decision Methods

Finance Concepts I: Present Discounted Value, Risk/Return Tradeoff

OPTIMAL RISKY PORTFOLIOS- ASSET ALLOCATIONS. BKM Ch 7

Gatton College of Business and Economics Department of Finance & Quantitative Methods. Chapter 13. Finance 300 David Moore

BOND ANALYTICS. Aditya Vyas IDFC Ltd.

Portfolio Management

Chapter 2 Fundamental Economic Concepts

Chapter 10. Chapter 10 Topics. What is Risk? The big picture. Introduction to Risk, Return, and the Opportunity Cost of Capital

Analysis INTRODUCTION OBJECTIVES

Chapter 10: Capital Markets and the Pricing of Risk

Stock Rover Profile Metrics

Portfolio Project. Ashley Moss. MGMT 575 Financial Analysis II. 3 November Southwestern College Professional Studies

Chapter 15. Required Returns and the Cost of Capital. Required Returns and the Cost of Capital. Key Sources of Value Creation

LDI approaches have been adopted by an increasing

6a. Current holders of Greek bonds face which risk? a) inflation risk

CHAPTER 5: ANSWERS TO CONCEPTS IN REVIEW

Solved MCQs MGT201. (Group is not responsible for any solved content)

Investment Management

Chapter 5: Answers to Concepts in Review

CHAPTER 10 SOME LESSONS FROM CAPITAL MARKET HISTORY

Archana Khetan 05/09/ MAFA (CA Final) - Portfolio Management

MGT Financial Management Mega Quiz file solved by Muhammad Afaaq

Managerial Economics Uncertainty

Risk and Return (Introduction) Professor: Burcu Esmer

WHY DO INTEREST RATES CHANGE? Luigi Vena 02/22/2017 LIUC Università Cattaneo

Monetary Economics Measuring Asset Returns. Gerald P. Dwyer Fall 2015

Suggested Answers to Discussion Questions

1) If you are thinking of investing in a stock, what things would you investigate? CF Risk News (company, industry, economy)

University 18 Lessons Financial Management. Unit 12: Return, Risk and Shareholder Value

Chapter 8 Risk and Rates of Return

Lecture 15. Thursday Mar 25 th. Advanced Topics in Capital Budgeting

FIN Second (Practice) Midterm Exam 04/11/06

10. Lessons From Capital Market History

Paper 2.6 Fixed Income Dealing

Question # 4 of 15 ( Start time: 07:07:31 PM )

Risk Management [A Helicopter View]

For 9.220, Term 1, 2002/03 02_Lecture12.ppt Student Version. What is risk? An overview of market performance Measuring performance

Chapter 13 Return, Risk, and Security Market Line

April The Value Reversion

CFA Level I - LOS Changes

3. Time value of money. We will review some tools for discounting cash flows.

Answers A, B and C are all symptoms of overtrading whereas answer D is not as it deals with long term financing issues.

CFA Level I - LOS Changes

Transcription:

Chapter 4 Investment Return and Risk

Return The reward for investing. Most returns are not guaranteed. E(r) is important factor in selection. Total Return consists of Current Income Appreciation 4-2

Importance of Return Allows comparison of Investment alternatives actual and E(r) Historical returns allow comparison of past performance of various investment vehicles Set base for E(r) 4-3

Level of E(r) Depends on Internal characteristics type of investment vehicle investment's financing customer base of the issuer firm management. External forces war, shortages, political actions and events, inflation, deflation, and Federal Reserve actions 4-4

Time Value of Money Now is better than later Compounding Measures Future Value Present Value Good Investment Cost < PV of Expected Benefits 4-5

Required Rate of Return Critical element critical in investor choice ROR an investor must earn to be fully compensated for risk. Required ROR = R f + Risk Premium R f = Real ROR + Inflation Premium 4-6

Components of Req ROR The Risk-Free Rate (R f ) 90-day US Treasury bill rate is common proxy rises and falls with changes in expected rate of inflation. The Real Rate of Return Return earned in a perfect world where all outcomes are certain R f - minus rate of inflation. 4-7

Components of Req. ROR Risk premium Incorporates market, issue and issuer characteristics for which investors must be compensated. Considers: type of security Industry and company considerations Maturity Other features 4-8

Holding Period Return (HPR) Holding period (HP) the relevant period of time over which one wishes to measure total return. usually one year or shorter. In comparing HPRs, must use same HP. HPR = [current income + capital gain(loss)] beginning investment value 4-9

Internal Rate of Return (Yield) Compounded annual ROR earned by a long-term investment; a.k.a. the discount rate that equates PV of benefits to cost Determined by trial and error Assumption: Cashflows are reivested at same IRR 4-10

IRR/Yield Good investment: IRR > Discount Rate 4-11

Growth Rate The compound annual rate of change in the value of a stream of income. Often used to determine/estimate dividend growth 4-12

Risk Chance that actual return differs from E(r) The broader the range of possible returns (greater volatility) from an investment, the greater its risk Risk-return Tradeoff 4-13

Sources of Risk Business Risk uncertainty associated with company's earnings and ability to make payments deals with asset side of the balance sheet Financial Risk uncertainty of payments attributable to capital structure deals with liabilities side of the balance sheet 4-14

Sources of Risk Purchasing power risk chance that changing price levels (inflation / deflation) will adversely affect investment returns Interest rate risk chance that changes in interest rates will adversely affect a security's value Reinvestment Risk 4-15

Sources of Risk Liquidity (marketability) risk the risk of not being able to sell an investment quickly and at a reasonable price. Tax (Regulatory) risk the risk that Congress will enact tax laws that affect companies and investments adversely. 4-16

Sources of Risk Market risk Risks which affect all investments. Examples include war, changes in GDP growth, money supply changes, and so on. Event risk comes from an unexpected event that has a significant and usually immediate effect on the underlying value of an investment. 4-17

Review Review problems 3, 7, 8 and 9 in Volume III, Investments 4-18

Measuring Risk Standard Deviation Measures variability of returns around the average return of the investment. an absolute measure of risk. 4-19

Measuring Risk Average Return arithmetic sum of all returns divided by the number of observations. Standard Deviation equals: SD n i 1 ( return for outcome total # of outcomes 1 i avg. return) 2 4-20

Measuring Risk SD n i 1 ( return for outcome total # of outcomes 1 i avg. return) 2 SD n i 1 ( r i n 1 r) 2 4-21

Comparing Investments If average returns are equal the larger the standard deviation, the greater the risk. If average returns are not equal Calculate the Coefficient of Variation Equals STD / (Avg. Return x 100) This converts the standard deviation to a percentage of the average return. 4-22

Coefficient of Variation Measures relative dispersion of asset returns. Useful in comparing the risk of assets with differing average or expected returns. The higher the coefficient of variation, the greater the risk. 4-23

Assessing Risk Requires understanding of Risk-return characteristics of alternative investment vehicles (Figure 4.2) Acceptable level of risk Risk-indifferent Risk-averse Risk-seeking Investment decision process 4-24

Combining Risk & Return 1. Estimate E(r) using historical return data as guideline 2. Assess the risk of the investment a) Subjective b) Standard deviation c) Coefficient of variation d) Beta 4-25

Combining Risk and Return 3. Evaluate the risk-return behavior of each alternative a. make sure E(r) is reasonable given the risk. 4. Select investments with highest expected returns given the risk the investor is willing to take 4-26

Review Review problems 144, 147 and 149 in Volume III, Investments 4-27