investments exam two
investor assumptions of CAPM
-investors plan for the same (single period) horizon -investors are efficient users of analytical methods: investors have homogeneous expectations -investors are rational, mean variance optimizers
risk premium
expected return in excess if that on risk free securities
fundamental analysis EMH
-research on determinants of stock value i.e. earnings, dividend prospects, future interest expectations, and firm risk -assumes stock price is equal to discounted value of expected future cash flow
technical analysis EMH
-research on recurrent and predictable price patterns and on proxies for buy/ sell pressure in market -resistance level: unlikely for stock/ index to rise above -support level: unlikely for stock/ index to fall below
implications of CAPM
-security risk premiums will be proportional to B -all investors choose the same portfolio -active vs. passive investment strategy
market risk
-systematic/ nondiversifiable risk -a risk common to the whole economy -cannot be diversified away
implications of EMH
-technical analysis -fundamental analysis -active vs passive management
three rules of two risk asset portfolios
1. ROR 2. ERR 3. variance of ROR
geometric return
single per-period return -gives same cumulative performance as sequence of actual returns -compound period-by-period returns; find per-period rate that compounds to the same value
standard deviation
square root of variance
weak form EMH
stock prices already reflect all information contained in history of trading -prices, trading volume
semi strong form EMH
stock prices already reflect all public information
strong form EMH
stock prices already reflect all relevant information, including inside information
alpha
stock's expected return beyond that induced by market index
arithmic return
sum of returns in each period divided by the number of periods
In the context of the capital asset pricing model, the systematic measure of risk is captured by _________.
B
market assumptions of CAPM
-all investors are price takers -all information relevant to security analysis is free and publicly available -all securities are publicly owned and traded -no taxes on investment returns -no transaction costs -lending and borrowing at the same risk free rate are unlimited
optimal portfolio
-expand asset choices to include risk-free asset -then resulting opportunity set is also the CAL -CAL with the highest Sharpe ratio gives the best opportunity set -this line is tangent to the investment opportunity set of risky assets as the optimal risky portfolio -optimal risky portfolio has the highest Sharpe ratio -all investors will choose the same optimal portfolio regardless of their risk aversion -based on their risk aversion they choose different combinations of risk free assets and optimal portfolio
unique / firm specific risk
-nonsystematic / diversifiable risk -risk that can be estimated by diversification
efficient marketing hypothesis
-prices of securities fully reflect all relevant information -weak form EMH -semi strong form EMH -strong form EMH
If enough investors decide to purchase stocks, they are likely to drive up stock prices, thereby causing _____________ and ___________. A. expected returns to fall; risk premiums to fall B. expected returns to rise; risk premiums to fall C. expected returns to rise; risk premiums to rise D. expected returns to fall; risk premiums to rise
A
32. Security X has an expected rate of return of 13% and a beta of 1.15. The risk -free rate is 5%, and the market expected rate of return is 15%. According to the capital asset pricing model, security X is _________. A. fairly priced B. overpriced C. underpriced D. none of these answers
B
Security A has an expected rate of return of 12% and a beta of 1.1. The market expected rate of return is 8%, and the risk -free rate is 5%. The alpha of the stock is _________. A. -1.7% B. 3.7% C. 5.5% D. 8.7%
B
According to the capital asset pricing model, a security with a _________. A. negative alpha is considered a good buy B. positive alpha is considered overpriced C. positive alpha is considered underpriced D. zero alpha is considered a good buy
C
Consider the capital asset pricing model. The market degree of risk aversion, A, is 3. The variance of return on the market portfolio is .0225. If the risk- free rate of return is 4%, the expected return on the market portfolio is _________. A. 6.75% B. 9% C. 10.75% D. 12%
C
Consider two stocks, A and B. Stock A has an expected return of 10% and a beta of 1.2. Stock B has an expected return of 14% and a beta of 1.8. The expected market rate of return is 9% and the risk -free rate is 5%. Security __________ would be considered the better buy because_________. A. A; it offers an expected excess return of .2% B. A; it offers an expected excess return of 2.2% C. B; it offers an expected excess return of 1.8% D. B; it offers an expected return of 2.4%
C
If all investors become more risk averse, the SML will _______________ and stock prices will _______________. A. shift upward; rise B. shift downward; fall C. have the same intercept with a steeper slope; fall D. have the same intercept with a flatter slope; rise
C
The graph of the relationship between expected return and beta in the CAPM context is called the _________. A. CML B. CAL C. SML D. SCL
C
You invest $600 in security A with a beta of 1.5 and $400 in security B with a beta of .90. The beta of this portfolio is _________. A. 1.14 B. 1.2 C. 1.26 D. 1.5
C
According to the capital asset pricing model, fairly priced securities have _________. A. negative betas B. positive alphas C. positive betas D. zero alphas
D
The market portfolio has a beta of _________. A. -1 B. 0 C. 0.5 D. 1
D
When all investors analyze securities in the same way and share the same economic view of the world, we say they have ____________________. A. heterogeneous expectations B. equal risk aversion C. asymmetric information D. homogeneous expectations
D
Which of the following are assumptions of the simple CAPM model? I. Individual trades of investors do not affect a stock's price. II. All investors plan for one identical holding period. III. All investors analyze securities in the same way and share the same economic view of the world. IV. All investors have the same level of risk aversion.
I, II, and III only
investment opportunity set
a set of available portfolio risk-return combinations -allocation between risky assets: risk-return trade-off -mean variance criterion: 1. if expected return of A is greater than B and standard deviation of A is less than B then A dominates B 2. all investors will prefer A to B 3. in the graph, A will be northwest to B
Are the following true or false? Explain. A. Stocks with a beta of zero offer an expected rate of return of zero. B. The CAPM implies that investors require a higher return to hold highly volatile securities. C. You can construct a portfolio with a beta of .75 by investing .75 of the investment budget in T-bills and the remainder in the market portfolio.
a- false b- true c- false
positive-alpha stock
abnormal rate of return on security in excess of that predicted by equilibrium model (CAPM)
capital market line
capital allocation line using market index portfolio as risky asset passive investment strategy allocates portfolio on CML -does not require security analysis -inexpensive and simple -S&P 500 -gaining in popularity
mean variance analysis
evaluating portfolios according to their expected returns and standard deviations
variance
expected value of squared deviation from mean
efficient frontier
graph representing a set of portfolios that maximizes the expected return at each level of portfolio risk -expected returns are estimated based on fundamental analysis variances and covariances are estimated using historical data
seperation property
implies portfolio choice can be separated into two independent tasks: 1. determination of optimal risky portfolio (purely technical problem) 2. personal choice of best mix of risky portfolio and risk-free asset (depends on individual's risk aversion)
random walk
indicates well functioning-markets, not irrational ones -only new information will cause the change in stock price -notion that stock price changes are random
dollar weighted average return
internal rate of return on investment
expected return
mean value of distribution of HPR
value at risk
measure of downside risk -the worst loss that will be suffered with a given probability -often 1% or 5%
active vs passive portfolio management EMH
passive investment strategy: -buying well diversified portfolio without attempting to find misplaces securities -index fund -mutual fund which holds shares in proportion to market index representation
scenario analysis
possible economic scenarios -specify likelihood and HPR -derived from history of returns
probability distribution
possible outcomes with probabilities
excess return
rate of return in excess of that on risk free rate
holding period return
rate of return over given investment period
risk free rate
rate of return that can be earned with certainty
Sharpe ratio
ratio of portfolio risk premium to standard deviation -reward-to-voliatility
price of risk
ratio of risk premium to variance
index model
relates stock returns to returns on broad market index firm-specific factors
risk aversion
reluctance to accept risk
security market line (SML)
represents expected return-beta relationship of CAPM -graphs individual asset risk premiums as functions of asset risk
beta
sensitivity of security's return to market factor