Ree Turns
Ree Turns
Ree Turns
Management
Anshul Jain
What is Risk ?
Return Statistics
• The history of capital market returns can be
summarized by describing the:
• average return
Average Standard
Series Annual Return Deviation Distribution
– 90% 0% + 90%
Average Stock Returns
and Risk-Free Returns
⚫ The Risk Premium is the added return (over and above the
risk-free rate) resulting from bearing risk.
⚫ One of the most significant observations of stock market data
is the long-run excess of stock return over the risk-free return.
⚫ The average excess return from large company common stocks for the
period 1926 through 2011 was:
8.2% = 11.8% – 3.6%
⚫ The average excess return from small company common stocks for the
period 1926 through 2011 was:
12.9% = 16.5% – 3.6%
⚫ The average excess return from long-term corporate bonds for the
period 1926 through 2011 was:
2.8% = 6.4% – 3.6%
The Risk-Return Tradeoff
(US Markets)
Risk Statistics
Probability
– 3σ – 2σ – 1σ 0 + 1σ + 2σ + 3σ
– 49.1% – 28.8% – 8.5% 11.8% 32.1% 52.4% 72.7% Return on
large company common
68.26% stocks
95.44%
99.74%
More on Average Returns
• Arithmetic average – return earned in an average
period over multiple periods
• Geometric average – average compound return
per period over multiple periods
• The geometric average will be less than the
arithmetic average unless all the returns are equal.
• Which is better?
• The arithmetic average is overly optimistic for long
horizons.
• The geometric average is overly pessimistic for short
horizons.
Economic Fundamentals
• Investor rationality: Investors are assumed to prefer
more money to less and less risk to more, all else equal.
The result of this assumption is that the ex ante
risk-return trade-off will be upward sloping.
• As risk-averse return-seekers, investors will take actions
consistent with the rationality assumptions. They will
require higher returns to invest in riskier assets and are
willing to accept lower returns on less risky assets.
• Similarly, they will seek to reduce risk while attaining
the desired level of return, or increase return without
exceeding the maximum acceptable level of risk.
Individual Securities
100%
bonds
ρ = -1.0 100%
stocks
n
ρ = 1.0
100% ρ = 0.2
bonds
σ
• Relationship depends on correlation coefficient
-1.0 < ρ < +1.0
• If ρ = +1.0, no risk reduction is possible
• If ρ = –1.0, complete risk reduction is possible
The Efficient Set for Many Securities
return
Individual
Assets
σP
Consider a world with many risky assets; we can still
identify the opportunity set of risk-return combinations of
various portfolios.
The Efficient Set for Many Securities
return f r o n tier
ient
effic
minimum
variance
portfolio
Individual Assets
σP
The section of the opportunity set above the minimum
variance portfolio is the efficient frontier.
Diversification and Portfolio Risk
• Diversification can substantially reduce the variability
of returns without an equivalent reduction in expected
returns.
rf
100%
bonds
σ
In addition to stocks and bonds, consider a world that
also has risk-free securities like T-bills.
Riskless Borrowing and Lending
return
L
CM efficient frontier
rf
σP
rf
σP
With the capital allocation line identified, all investors choose a
point along the line—some combination of the risk-free asset and
the market portfolio M. In a world with homogeneous
expectations, M is the same for all investors.
Riskless Borrowing and Lending
return
L
CM 100%
stocks
Balanced
fund
rf
100%
bonds
σ
Now investors can allocate their money across the
T-bills and a balanced mutual fund.
Market Equilibrium
return
L
CM 100%
stocks
Balanced
fund
rf
100%
bonds
σ
Where the investor chooses along the Capital Market Line
depends on her risk tolerance. The big point is that all
investors have the same CML.
Risk When Holding the Market Portfolio
i ne
c L
s t i
teri
ra c
a
Ch
Slope = βi
Return on
market %
R i = α i + β i R m + ei
The Formula for Beta
Expected
Risk-fre Beta of the Market risk
return on = + ×
e rate security premium
a security
1.0 β
Relationship Between Risk & Return
Expected
return
1.5 β
SML vs CML
• SML
• Return vs Beta
• Expected Security or Portfolio Return given Beta
• CML
• Return vs StDev
• Efficient Portfolios which have maximum return for
given total risk
• Not for individual Securities