Chap005 - Introduction Risk and Return - Khoa PDF
Chap005 - Introduction Risk and Return - Khoa PDF
Chap005 - Introduction Risk and Return - Khoa PDF
Introduction to
Risk and Return
Slides by
Matthew Will
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2011 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
7-2
Chapter Outline
0% or 25%?
A B
Suppose you buy a particular If we calculate the
stock for $100. Unfortunately, returns year-by-year, we see
the first year you own it, it
falls to $50. The second year that you lost 50 % the first
you own it, it rises back to year (you lost half of your
$100, leaving you where you money).
started (no dividends were
The second year, you made
paid).
100 % (you doubled your
Common sense seems to say
that your average return must money).
be exactly zero because you Your average return over the
started with $100 and ended two years was (–50 % + 100
with $100
%)/2 = 25 %!
Geometric Average Return Vs 7-7
Measuring Risk
Standard Deviation - A
measure of volatility.
– A popular statistical
measure that quantifies the
dispersion around the
expected value
– Used to calculate degree of
risk
Variance - Average value of
squared deviations from mean.
A measure of volatility.
7-10
Measuring Risk
Coin Toss Game-calculating variance and standard deviation
Normal Distribution and Its 7-11
Asset
7-13
Variability Exercise
Using the following
returns, calculate the
average returns, the
variances, and the
standard deviations
for X and Y
7-18
7-19
Why it Matters
a Portfolio of Assets
• A portfolio is a collection of
1 assets
Portfolio Weights
How to compute the asset weights for your
portfolio
– Portfolio weights
• The amount invested in asset i divided by the total
amount invested in the portfolio
7-22
40
35
30
25
20
33.93 34.3
15 28.32 29.57
23.98 24.09 25.28
20.16 21.83 22.05 22.99 23.23 23.42 23.51
10 17.02
18.45 19.22
5
0
Ireland
Switzerland
Australia
Netherlands
Denmark
Spain
Italy
Germany
South Africa
Japan
Norway
Canada
Belgium
U.S.
Sweden
U.K.
France
7-26
Measuring Risk
Measuring Risk
Diversification
• Strategy designed to reduce risk by spreading the
portfolio across many investments
Market Risk
• Economy-wide sources of risk that affect the overall
stock market.
• Also called “systematic risk.”
Unique Risk
• Risk factors affecting only that firm.
• Also called “unsystematic risk.”
7-28
Diversification Effects
• Average risk (standard
deviation) of portfolios
containing different
numbers of stocks.
• The stocks were
selected randomly from
stocks traded on the
New York Exchange
from 2002 through
2007.
• Notice that
diversification reduces
risk rapidly at first,
then more slowly
7-30
Measuring Risk
Portfolio standard deviation
Unique
risk
Market risk
0
5 10 15
Number of Securities
7-31
Portfolio Risk
Covariance
7-33
Correlation
=+1
Correlation
=+0.18
Correlation
=-1
7-36
Diversification Check
In which of the following situations would
you get the largest reduction in risk by
spreading your investment across two
stocks?
a. The two shares are perfectly correlated.
b. There is no correlation.
c. There is modest negative correlation.
d. There is perfect negative correlation
7-37
Portfolio Risk
Portfolio Risk
The return on Dell stock
changes on average
by 1.41% for each
additional 1% change in
the market return. Beta
is therefore 1.41.
7-41
Portfolio Risk
Portfolio Risk
im
Bi 2
m
Covariance with the
market
stocks
7-44
Beta Exercise 2
Suppose the standard deviation of the market
return is 20%.
a. What is the standard deviation of returns on a
well-diversified portfolio with a beta of 1.3?
b. What is the standard deviation of returns on a
well-diversified portfolio with a beta of 0?
c. A well-diversified portfolio has a standard
deviation of 15%. What is its beta?
d. A poorly diversified portfolio has a standard
deviation of 20%. What can you say about its
beta?
7-45
Beta
Home work 1
You find a certain stock that had returns of 19
%, –27 %, 6 %, and 34 % for four of the last
five years. If the average return of the stock
over this period was 11 %, what was the
stock’s return for the missing year? What is
the standard deviation of the stock’s returns?