Phan Tich Va Dau Tu Chung Khoan
Phan Tich Va Dau Tu Chung Khoan
Phan Tich Va Dau Tu Chung Khoan
L/O/G/O
SECURITIES ANALYSIS
AND INVESTMENT
OUTCOMES
v Analyse investment environment
v Understand and apply methods to analyse and value bonds
v Understand and apply methods to analyse and value shares
v Understand content and know how to build the optimal
investment porfolio
Assessment
v Attendance: 10%
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Materials
• Investment -10th Edition- Bodie, Kane, Macus –
Mc Graw-Hill.
• Investment Analysis and portfolio management,
7th edition, Frank Reilly and Keith Brown.
• Giáo trình Phân tích và Đầu tư chứng khoán,
2018, Học viện Ngân hàng
www.themegallery.com
Assignment
• You want to invest amount of money in securities
market. You could choose to invest in listed
stocks in Ho Chi Minh stock exchange or Hanoi
stock exchange.
• You need to analyse macro economy, industry,
and companies to choose some stocks to invest.
Then, you need to build an portfolio based on
your risk appetite.
• Deadline for submission: week 7.
Assignment requirements
• Maximum 7 students/group
• 15 minute to present and answer questions
• Submit reports
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Contents
1 INVESTMENT ENVIRONMENT
L/O/G/O
CHAPTER 1:
INVESTMENT ENVIRONMENT
CONTENTS
1
SECURITIES INVESTMENT
2
RISK AND RETURN
3
INVESTMENT PROCESS
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1. SECURITIES INVESTMENT
11
Concept check
What are financial asset?
1. Patent
2. Certificates of deposit
3. Future contract
4. Bonds
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INSTRUMENTS
v Securities are the proof confirming the legitimate rights
(claims) of the ownership of holders on the property or capital of
the issuer.
Confirm the legal rights of securities holders, including :
Ownership ( for equity securities)
Debt owner’s rights (debt securities: corporate bonds, sovereign
bonds)
Financial rights related to securities ( for derivatives)
v Securities are in the form of paper certificates, a book entry or
electronic data.
v Protected by securities laws
Financial investment
Financial Investment
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Financial Instruments
FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS
FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS
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TIPS
• Orders:
– Limited order (LO)
– Market price (MP)
– ATO
– ATC
– Stop order
• Special transactions:
– Margin trading
– Short selling
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MEASURE OF RETURN
Measure of return
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Measure of return
• Holding Period Return – HPR
Measure of return
• Holding Period Yield – HPY
HPY = HPR annual - 1
Measure of return
• Example: An investment in a stock at price
$1000. After 2 years, the investment value
increase to $1100 and received dividend is
$40. Determine HPR, HPY?
HPR = 1140/1000 = 1.14
HPR annual = 1.141/2 = 1.068
HPY = 1.068 – 1 = 6.8%
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Measure of return
Mean rates of return: over a number of years, a single
investment will likely give high rates of return during
some years and low rates or possibly negative rates of
return.
Arithmetic mean (AM):
AM = (HPY1+HPY2+…+HPYn)/n
Geometric mean (GM):
GM = [(1+HPY1)(1+HPY2)…(1+HPYn)]1/n – 1
Measure of return
• Example:
Year Beginning Ending HPY
value value
1 100 120 0.2
2 113 140 0.239
3 110 104 - 0.054
– Geometric mean
GM = [(1+0.2)(1+0.239)…(1-0.054)]1/3 - 1= 12.04%
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Measure of return
Expected Rates of Return: determine rates of return of an
investment in the future based on range of possible returns. An
investor determines how certain the expected return on an
investment is by analyzing estimates of possible return and
probability of return.
n
E(Ri ) = ∑P *R i i
i=1
Measure of return
• Example: An investment in stock XYZ has
potential returns as the following:
HPY Probability
0.8 20%
0.1 40%
-0.35 40%
Measure of risk
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Risk
Risk
The
uncertainty
of
Systematic Unsystematic
achieving
risk risk
the
expected
return
RISK
Risk = UNCERTAINTY
Risk = the variation of return associated with a given asset
Risk = the deviation of realized rate of return from expected
rate of return.
MEASURE OF RISK
• Consider 2 investment assets:
A B
Expected 5% 5%
return
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MEASURE OF RISK
• Variance: measure the dispersion of possible
rates of return around the expected rate of
return.
Pi : probability
Ri : possible return
E( R ) : expected return
Measure of risk
• Consider 2 investment asset
A B
Possible return 4% 6% -8% 2% 6% 20%
Probability of 50% 50% 25% 25% 25% 25%
occurrence
Expected 5% 5%
return
Variance:
A: σ2 = 0.5 (0.04-0.05)2 + 0.5(0.06-0.05)2 = 0.0001 (0.01%)
B: σ2 = 0.25(-0.08-0.05)2 + 0.25(0.02-0.05)2 + 0.25(0.06-0.05)2 +
0.25(0.20-0.05)2 = 0.0101 (1.01%)
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Measure of risk
Standard Deviation: is the square root of the
variance
Pi : probability
Ri : possible return
E( R ) : expected return
Exercise
An investor invest 270 million dong in stocks XYZ at price
90000 dong/share. In next year, the investor could receive
cash dividend at rate 30% and the stock price is predicted
to be as following:
XYZ price 1 year later Probability
85.000 0.2
91.500 0.5
98.500 0.3
Exercise
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Exercise 2:
• Stock A and B has possible returns as following:
Stock A
Probability Pi Ri Pi×Ri Ri - E(R) (Ri - E(R))^2 Pi×(Ri - E(R))^2
σ = 0.2941/2 = 54.22%
Stock B
Probability Pi Ri Pi×Ri Ri - E(R) (Ri - E(R))^2 Pi×(Ri - E(R))^2
σ = 0.00151/2 = 3.87%
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Example
Consider 2 investment asset
A B
Possible return 4% 6% -8% 2% 6% 20%
Probability of 50% 50% 25% 25% 25% 25%
occurrence
Expected 5% 5%
return
Determine risk?
A: σ2 = 0.5 (0.04-0.05)2 + 0.5(0.06-0.05)2 = 0.0001 (0.01%)
B: σ2 = 0.25(-0.08-0.05)2 + 0.25(0.02-0.05)2 + 0.25(0.06-0.05)2 +
0.25(0.20-0.05)2 = 0.0101 (1.01%)
Exercise
• Consider the following 2 investments:
A B
Expected return 0.07 0.12
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• Standard deviation
INVESTMENT PROCESS
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INVESTMENT PROCESS
Discuss
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Investment policy
• Investors need to evaluate their risk tolerance via doing
survey from investment firms.
• Risk tolerance is affected by individual’s psychological,
family situation, cash reserves, current net worth, income
expectations and age.
Example
What is an appropriate investment objective for our typical
25-year-old investor?
Assume he holds a steady job, is a valued employee, has
adequate insurance coverage, and has enough money in the bank
to provide a cash reserve. Let’s also assume that his current long-
term, high-priority investment goal is to build a retirement fund.
Depending on his risk preferences, he can select a strategy
carrying moderate to high amounts of risk because the income
stream from his job will probably grow over time.
Further, given his young age and income growth potential, a low-
risk strategy, such as capital preservation or current income, is
inappropriate for his retirement fund goal; a total return or capital
appreciation objective would be most appropriate.
Example
Investment Objective: 65-Year-Old
Assume our typical 65-year-old investor likewise has adequate insurance
coverage and a cash reserve. Let’s also assume she is retiring this year.
This individual will want less risk exposure than the 25-year-old investor
because her earning power from employment will soon be ending; she
will not be able to recover any investment losses by saving more out of
her paycheck.
Depending on her income from social security and a pension plan, she
may need some current income from her retirement portfolio to meet
living expenses.
Given that she can be expected to live an average of another 20 years,
she will need protection against inflation.
Invest in stock and bond investments to meet income needs (from bond
income and stock dividends) and to provide for real growth (from
equities). Fixed-income securities should comprise 55–65 percent of the
total portfolio
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Example
Investment constraints
• Liquidity: Investors may have liquidity needs that the
investment plan must consider. Although an investor may
have a primary long-term goal, several near-term goals
may require available funds.
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Investment constraints
• Time horizon: Investors with long investment horizons
generally require less liquidity and can tolerate greater
portfolio risk: less liquidity because the funds are not
usually needed for many years; greater risk tolerance
because any shortfalls or losses can be overcome by
earnings and returns in subsequent years.
Securities analysis
• Analysis methods
Ø Fundamental analysis
Ø Technical analysis
• Aims
Ø Choose securities, determine price and time to
buy and sell.
Portfolio construction
• Portfolio is constructed based on diversification rule
that could minimize the investors’ risks while meeting
the needs specified in the policy statement.
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Portfolio management
• Portfolio management process is the continual monitoring of
the investor’s needs and capital market conditions and when
necessary, updating the policy statement.
• An important component of the monitoring process is to
evaluate a portfolio’s performance and compare the relative
results to the expectations and the requirements listed in the
policy statement.
L/O/G/O
w w w . t h e m e g a l l e r y . c o m
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CHAPTER II:
BOND ANALYSIS AND
VALUATION
CONTENTS
BASIC FEATURES
BOND PRICING
BOND YIELDS
DURATION
CONVEXITY
Bonds
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Characteristics
1. Par Value
– Nominal value of bonds, printed on the bonds’ faces
– Uses of par value?
2. Maturity
- The period of time from when the bond is issue to when the loan
is due
- Determined when the bond is issued
- Varies in maturities: Short-term bonds (1 – 5 years), Mid-term
bonds (5 – 12 years), Long-term bonds (over 12 years)
- Bond yields & price fluctuation are related to maturities (Yield to
Maturity – YTM)
Yield Curve
Characteristics (cont.)
3. Coupon rate (nominal rate)
-The amount of interest committed by the bond issuers to pay for the
bond holders, calculated as a percentage of the par value.
-Determined at the time of issuance along with the bond’s maturity,
can be fixed or gradually increasing (step-up notes)
-The CR are used for auctioning when issuing bonds
4. Issuing price
-The price at which the bond is sold out at issuance
-Can be larger, smaller than, or equal to the par value
5. Interest payment period
-The frequency of interest payments
-Can be annual, semi-annual, quarterly or none (Zero coupon bonds)
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1. Basic features
1. Features
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Convertible bonds
Convertible bonds
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Credit rating
Credit rating
Rating system:
– High rate = low credit risk
– Denoted by symbol
Moody’s: Aaa
S&P: AAA
Fitch: AAA
– Investment grade bond & high – yield bond
– Rating transition matrix
Factors considered in assigning rating (Cs)
– Character of management
– Capacity of issuer
– Collateral
– Covenants 14
Credit rating
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Liquidity risk
Inflation risk
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3. BOND VALUATION
• Rules:
v Determine the present value of bond’s expected
cash flows in the future at appropriate discount
factor (required rate of return on the bond)
3. BOND VALUATION
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BOND VALUATION
$C $C $C $C+F
……
0 1 2 3 . T
…….
BOND VALUATION
BOND VALUATION
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BOND VALUATION
BOND VALUATION
⎡ 1− (1+ r)− n ⎤ −n
P =C⎢ ⎥ + F(1+ r)
⎣ r ⎦
• Paying interest semi-annually
⎡ 1− (1+ r / 2)−2n ⎤
P =C⎢ ⎥ + F(1+ r / 2)−2n
⎣ r /2 ⎦
BOND VALUATION
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F
P=
(1+ r)T
EXERCISE
BOND VALUATION
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Exercise:
Bond A has face value $1000. Coupon rate 9%, paying
interest annually. Bond A is quoted at the price 108%
face value. The last coupon had been paid last month.
Determine bond price?
EXERCISE
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Bond pricing
• r = 12%, F = 1000$
• C = 1000 * 10% = 100$
•
Bond pricing
• Case 1: r = 12%/năm
• Case 2: r = 10%/năm
• Case 3: r = 8%/năm
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Price
YIELD (%)
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1134
1000
887
8 10 12
NOMINAL YIELD
42
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Current Yield
Current yield
• Example
A bond has 5 years to maturity. Coupon rate is
8%/ year, face value is $100. This bond pays
interest annually. The current market price is
$94. Determine current yield?
Ø r : IRR
Ø P1: ending investment period price
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Yield to maturity
Yield to Maturity
F : Face value
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Yield to Maturity
Yield to Maturity
Yield to Maturity
Exercise
A bond has 5 years to maturity, coupon rate 8%,
face value $100. This bond pays interest
annually. The current market price is $94.
Determine YTM?
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Yield to call
C : coupon payment
y : yield to call
M: Call price (the price at which the bond may be called)
Yield to call
Price
Non-callable bonds
Callable
bonds
Yield
Yield to call
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55
Realized Return
Realized yield
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Realized Return
• Example
A bond has 3 years to maturity, coupon rate
10%/year, face value 100$. Yield to maturity is
10%. This bond pay interest annually. Determine
realized yield investors receive when investing in
these bonds. Given that reinvestment rate for
coupon is 8%/ year
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1134
1000
887
CONTENTS:
• Duration
• Convexity
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Malkiel (1962) used the bond valuation model to demonstrate that the
market price of a bond is a function of four factors: (1) its par value,
(2) its coupon, (3) the number of years to its maturity, and (4) the
prevailing market interest rate.
Malkiel’s mathematical proofs showed the following relation- ships
between yield (interest rate) changes and bond price behavior:
1.Bond prices move inversely to bond yields (interest rate)
2.Bond price movements resulting from equal absolute increases or
decreases in yield are not symmetrical. A decrease in yield raises
bond prices by more than an increase in yield of the same amount
lowers prices
Relationship 1 and 2
Price
P1
P2
Y1 Y Y2 Yield
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Relationship 1 and 2
Relationship 1 and 2
Relationship 3 and 4
3. For a given change in yields, longer maturity bonds experience
larger price changes; thus, bond price volatility is directly related to
term to maturity.
4. Bond price volatility increases at a diminishing rate as term to
maturity increases.
Example: 3 bonds have similar face value $100 and coupon rate 6%/
year, pay interest semi-annually. These bonds are sold at YTM 6%/
year.
- Bond A maturity: 1 year
- Bond B maturity: 5 year
- Bond C maturity: 20 year
Determine percentage change in price of each bond when YTM change
from 6% to 8%.
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Relationship 3 and 4
Relationship 5
Relationship 5
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Relationship 6
6. Bond price volatility increase when bonds are sold at the lower
yield to maturity
Example
Bond A has maturity 25 year, coupon rate 9%/year, face value
$100, pay interest annually. Determine bond price sensitivity
when interest rates change?
Relationship 6
Price volatility
Modified Convexity
Duration
duration
75
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(1) Duration
Duration
• Macaulay duration
The duration of a bond was a more appropriate measure
of time characteristics than the term to maturity of the
bond because duration con- siders both the repayment
of capital at maturity and the size and timing of coupon
payments prior to final maturity.
= Macaulay duration
From bond pricing formula:
To determine the approximate change in price for a small change in yield, the
first derivative of equation with respect to required yield can be computed as:
78
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Macaulay duration
[ t
wt = CF t (1 + r ) P ]
T
D= ∑ t ×w t
t =1
79
DURATION
• Formula:
C : coupon interest
r : yield
F : Face value
P : Bond price
T: time to maturity
t: time of each cash
flow
Example
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DURATION
DURATION CHARACTERISTICS
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DURATION CHARACTERISTICS
DURATION CHARACTERISTICS
DURATION CHARACTERISTICS
YTM Duration
6%/ 5 years 6%/ 20 years 9%/ 5 years 9%/ 20 years
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v D: duration
v y: yield to maturity
v ∆y: interest rate change
v ∆P: price change
v P: bond price
Quiz
• Modified duration
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DURATION
Portfolio duration
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Convexity
• Formula:
Convexity
CONVEXITY
Year CF t(t+1)CF
1 8$ 0.7722 16 12.3552
2 8$ 0.7084 48 34.0032
3 8$ 0.6500 96 62.4000
4 8$ 0.5963 160 95.4080
5 108$ 0.5470 3240 1772.2800
Sum 3560 1976.446
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Convexity characteristics
Application
Bond B
Bond A
Δ YTM (%)
Example 2
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Application
100
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CHAPTER 3
FUNDAMENTAL ANALYSIS
FUNDAMENTAL ANALYSIS
Macroeconomic analysis
CONTENT
3 2
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FUNDAMENTAL ANALYSIS
q There are two main methods in fundamental analysis:
• Top – down approach
• Bottom – up approach
1 2 3
If analysts implements the process from 1 to 3: Top – down approach and vice versa
5
MACROECONOMIC ANALYSIS
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MACROECONOMIC ANALYSIS
q Resources
• IMF: World Economic Outlook
• World Bank: Global Economic Prospects
• Macroeconomic report from securities companies, investment banks,
such as: Goldman sachs, JP Morgan, Morgan Stanley…
GLOBAL ECONOMY
GLOBAL ECONOMY
q Political risk:
• Greek and Spanish economies
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Source: Sta3sta.com
Source: Sta3sta.com
MACROECONOMIC INDICATORS
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MACROECOMIC INDICATORS
q Key Variables
• Gross domestic product (GDP)
• Unemployment rates
• Inflation (CPI)
• Interest rates
• Budget deficit
Source: Gso.gov.vn
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Source: Gso.gov.vn
MACROECONOMIC POLICY
q Monetary policy
• Interest rate
• Money supply
q Fiscal policy
• Tax
• Government expenditure
INDUSTRY ANALYSIS
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INDUSTRY ANALYSIS
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INDUSTRY ANALYSIS
Industry
cyclicality:
Growth
of
sales,
year
over
year,
in
two
industries;
sales
of
jewelry
show
much
greater
varia3on
than
sales
of
groceries
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COMPANY ANALYSIS
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DIFFERENTIATION STRATEGY
q Differentiation strategy
SWOT ANALYSIS
• Examination of a firm’s:
• Strengths
• Weaknesses
• Opportunities
• Threats
• Growth
• Defensive
• Cyclical
• Speculative
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GROWTH COMPANIES
GROWTH STOCKS
• A growth stock has a higher rate of return than other stocks with similar risk
• Growth stocks will have positive earnings surprises and above-average risk
adjusted rates of return because the stocks are undervalued
• Value stocks appear to be undervalued for reasons besides earnings growth
potential
• Value stocks usually have low P/E ratio or low ratios of price to book value
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STOCK VALUATION
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• Identify the mispriced stocks then give investment advice for investors
• In other words, there are two main steps in investment process in fundamental analysis
q If Market price is bigger than intrinsic value, it means that the stock is overvalued,
investor should sell the stock or shouldn’t buy that stock
q If Market price is smaller than intrinsic value, it means that the stock is undervalued,
investor should buy the stock.
• Price/Earnings Ratios
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D 50 * 6%
V0 = = = 30
k 10%
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D0 (1 + g ) D1
V0 = =
k−g k−g
18-‐43
Constant growth:
D0 (1 + g ) D1
V0 = =
k−g k−g
18-‐44
• Constant growth
• Example 2
18-‐45
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D0 (1 + g ) 2 * (1 + 5%)
V0 = = = 42
k−g 10% − 5%
18-‐46
• Constant growth
• Example 3
2) If the current price of stock is $36. How the investor should do
in this case?
18-‐47
D1 2*
V0 = = = 50
k − g 10% − 6%
18-‐48
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18-‐49
• Example 4: k = 8%
• D1 = D0*(1 + 10%) = 3*1.1 = 3.3
• D2 = D0*(1+10%)^2 = 3*1.1^2 = 3.63
• D3 = D0*(1+10%)^3 = 3.993
• Then g = 5% to infinity
D1 D2 D3 P3
V0 = + + +
1+ k (1 + k )2 (1 + k )3 (1 + k )3
D1 D2 D3 D3 * (1 + g )
V0 = + + + = 120.27
1 + k (1 + k )2 (1 + k )3 (k − g )(1 + k )3
18-‐50
18-‐51
17
Questions to be answered:
• What do we mean by risk aversion?
• What are the basic assumptions behind the
Markowitz portfolio theory?
• What is meant by risk and how do we measure it?
• How do we compute
• the expected rate of return for an individual risky asset
or a portfolio of assets?
• the standard deviation of rates of return for an
individual risky asset or a portfolio?
• What is meant by the covariance between rates of return and how do you
compute covariance?
1
§ As an investor you want to maximize the
returns for a given level of risk.
§ Your portfolio includes all of your assets and
liabilities
§ The relationship between the returns for assets
in the portfolio is important.
§ A good portfolio is not simply a collection of
individually good investments.
2
§ Quantifies risk
§ Derives the expected rate of return for a portfolio of
assets and an expected risk measure
§ Shows that the variance of the rate of return is a
meaningful measure of portfolio risk
§ Derives the formula for computing the variance of a
portfolio, showing how to effectively diversify a
portfolio
3
§ Variance or standard deviation of expected
return
§ Range of returns
§ Returns below expectations
§ Semivariance – a measure that only
considers deviations below the mean
§ These measures of risk implicitly assume
that investors want to minimize the damage
from returns less than some target rate
4
(Percent of Portfolio) Return (E[Ri ]) Return (Wi XE[Ri ])
n
E(R por ) = ∑ Wi × E(R i )
i=1
where:
Wi = the percent of the portfolio in asset i
E(R i ) = the expected rate of return for asset i
Variance ( σ 2) = .00050
Standard Deviation (σ ) = .02236
5
Computation of Monthly Rates of Return
Closing Closing
Date Price Dividend Return (%) Price Dividend Return (%)
Dec.00 60.938 45.688
Jan.01 58.000 -4.82% 48.200 5.50%
Feb.01 53.030 -8.57% 42.500 -11.83%
Mar.01 45.160 0.18 -14.50% 43.100 0.04 1.51%
Apr.01 46.190 2.28% 47.100 9.28%
May.01 47.400 2.62% 49.290 4.65%
Jun.01 45.000 0.18 -4.68% 47.240 0.04 -4.08%
Jul.01 44.600 -0.89% 50.370 6.63%
Aug.01 48.670 9.13% 45.950 0.04 -8.70%
Sep.01 46.850 0.18 -3.37% 38.370 -16.50%
Oct.01 47.880 2.20% 38.230 -0.36%
Nov.01 46.960 0.18 -1.55% 46.650 0.05 22.16%
Dec.01 47.150 0.40% 51.010 9.35%
E(RCoca-Cola)= -1.81% E(Rhome
E(RExxon)=
Depot)= 1.47%
§ A measure of the degree to which two variables “move together” relative to
their individual mean values over time
§ For two assets, i and j, the covariance of rates of return is defined as:
Cov ij
rij =
σ iσ j
where :
rij = the correlation coefficient of returns
σ i = the standard deviation of R it
σ j = the standard deviation of R jt
6
n n n
2 2
σ port = ∑w σ
i =1
i i + ∑∑ w i w j Cov ij
i =1 i =1
where :
σ port = the standard deviation of the portfolio
Wi = the weights of the individual assets in the portfolio, where
weights are determined by the proportion of value in the portfolio
σ i2 = the variance of rates of return for asset i
Cov ij = the covariance between the rates of return for assets i and j,
where Cov ij = rijσ iσ j
Asset E(R i ) Wi σ 2i σi
1 .10 .50 .0049 .07
2 .20 .50 .0100 .10
Case Correlation Coefficient Covariance
a +1.00 .0070
b +0.50 .0035
c 0.00 .0000
d -0.50 -.0035
e -1.00 -.0070
7
§ Assets may differ in expected rates of return
and individual standard deviations
§ Negative correlation reduces portfolio risk
§ Combining two assets with -1.0 correlation
reduces the portfolio standard deviation to
zero only when individual standard deviations
are equal
Asset E(R i )
1 0.10 rij = 0.00
2 0.20
Case W1 W2 E(Ri )
8
E(R)
0.20 2
With two perfectly
correlated assets, it
0.15
is only possible to Rij = +1.00
create a two asset
0.10 portfolio with risk- 1
return along a line
0.05 between either
single asset
-
0.00 0.01 0.02 0.03 0.04 0.05 0.06 0.07 0.08 0.09 0.10 0.11 0.12
Standard Deviation of Return
E(R) f
0.20 2
With uncorrelated g
h
assets it is possible i
0.15 j
to create a two Rij = +1.00
asset portfolio with
0.10 k
lower risk than 1
either single asset Rij = 0.00
0.05
-
0.00 0.01 0.02 0.03 0.04 0.05 0.06 0.07 0.08 0.09 0.10 0.11 0.12
Standard Deviation of Return
E(R) f
0.20 2
With correlated g
h
assets it is possible i
0.15 j
to create a two Rij = +1.00
asset portfolio
0.10 k Rij = +0.50
between the first 1
two curves Rij = 0.00
0.05
-
0.00 0.01 0.02 0.03 0.04 0.05 0.06 0.07 0.08 0.09 0.10 0.11 0.12
Standard Deviation of Return
9
E(R) With Rij = -0.50 f
0.20 negatively 2
g
correlated h
assets it is i
0.15 j
possible to Rij = +1.00
create a two k Rij = +0.50
0.10 asset portfolio 1
with much Rij = 0.00
0.05 lower risk than
either single
asset
-
0.00 0.01 0.02 0.03 0.04 0.05 0.06 0.07 0.08 0.09 0.10 0.11 0.12
Standard Deviation of Return
10
§ The efficient frontier represents that set of
portfolios with the maximum rate of return for
every given level of risk, or the minimum risk for
every level of return
§ Frontier will be portfolios of investments rather
than individual securities
§ Exceptions being the asset with the highest
return and the asset with the lowest risk
Efficient B
E(R) Frontier
A C
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E(R port )
U3’
U2’
U1’
U3 X
U2
U1
E(σ port )
12