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Chapter 7 Solutions

1. The document describes an investment opportunity set with a stock fund, bond fund, and risk-free asset. It calculates the minimum variance portfolio, tangency portfolio, and efficient frontier. 2. The optimal portfolio is the tangency portfolio with an expected return of 15.61% and standard deviation of 16.54%. It invests 45.16% in stocks and 54.84% in bonds. 3. To achieve a target return of 14%, the portfolio would invest 35.60% in stocks, 43.23% in bonds, and 21.19% in the risk-free asset, resulting in a standard deviation of 13.04%.

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100% found this document useful (1 vote)
617 views4 pages

Chapter 7 Solutions

1. The document describes an investment opportunity set with a stock fund, bond fund, and risk-free asset. It calculates the minimum variance portfolio, tangency portfolio, and efficient frontier. 2. The optimal portfolio is the tangency portfolio with an expected return of 15.61% and standard deviation of 16.54%. It invests 45.16% in stocks and 54.84% in bonds. 3. To achieve a target return of 14%, the portfolio would invest 35.60% in stocks, 43.23% in bonds, and 21.19% in the risk-free asset, resulting in a standard deviation of 13.04%.

Uploaded by

Ana Saggio
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 4

4.

The parameters of the opportunity set are:


E(rS) = 20%, E(rB) = 12%, σS = 30%, σB = 15%, ρ = 0.10
From the standard deviations and the correlation coefficient we generate the covariance
matrix [note that Cov(rS , rB )     S   B ]:
Bonds Stocks
Bonds 225 45
Stocks 45 900
The minimum-variance portfolio is computed as follows:
σ 2B −Cov( r S ,r B ) 225−45
= =0. 1739
wMin(S) = σ 2S +σ 2B −2 Cov( r S ,r B ) 900+225−( 2×45 )

wMin(B) = 1  0.1739 = 0.8261

The minimum variance portfolio mean and standard deviation are:


E(rMin) = (0.1739 × .20) + (0.8261 × .12) = .1339 = 13.39%
2 2 2 2 1/2
σ
Min
= [ wS σ S +wB σ B +2 wS w B Cov (r S , r B )]

= [(0.17392  900) + (0.82612  225) + (2  0.1739  0.8261  45)]1/2


= 13.92%

5.
Proportion Proportion Expected Standard
in Stock Fund in Bond Fund Return Deviation
0.00% 100.00% 12.00% 15.00%
17.39 82.61 13.39 13.92 minimum variance
20.00 80.00 13.60 13.94
40.00 60.00 15.20 15.70
45.16 54.84 15.61 16.54 tangency portfolio
60.00 40.00 16.80 19.53
80.00 20.00 18.40 24.48
100.00 0.00 20.00 30.00
Graph shown below.
25.00

INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITY SET

20.00 CML

Tangency
Portfolio
Efficient frontier
15.00 of risky assets

10.00 Minimum
Variance
rf = 8.00 Portfolio

5.00

0.00
0.00 5.00 10.00 15.00 20.00 25.00 30.00

6. The above graph indicates that the optimal portfolio is the tangency portfolio with expected
return approximately 15.6% and standard deviation approximately 16.5%.
7. The proportion of the optimal risky portfolio invested in the stock fund is given by:
[ E ( rS )  rf ]   B2  [ E ( rB )  rf ]  Cov( rS , rB )
wS 
[ E (rS )  rf ]   B2  [ E (rB )  rf ]   S2  [ E (rS )  rf  E (rB )  r f ]  Cov (rS , rB )
[(.20  .08)  225]  [(.12  .08)  45]
  0.4516
[(.20  .08)  225]  [(.12  .08)  900]  [(.20  .08  .12  .08)  45]
wB  1  0.4516  0.5484
The mean and standard deviation of the optimal risky portfolio are:
E(rP) = (0.4516 × .20) + (0.5484 × .12) = .1561
= 15.61%
σp = [(0.45162  900) + (0.54842  225) + (2  0.4516  0.5484 × 45)]1/2
= 16.54%

8. The reward-to-volatility ratio of the optimal CAL is:


E (rp )  rf .1561  .08
  0.4601
p .1654

9. a. If you require that your portfolio yield an expected return of 14%, then you can find
the corresponding standard deviation from the optimal CAL. The equation for this
CAL is:
E (rp )  rf
E (rC )  rf   C  .08  0.4601 C
P

If E(rC) is equal to 14%, then the standard deviation of the portfolio is 13.04%.

b. To find the proportion invested in the T-bill fund, remember that the mean of the
complete portfolio (i.e., 14%) is an average of the T-bill rate and the optimal
combination of stocks and bonds (P). Let y be the proportion invested in the portfolio
P. The mean of any portfolio along the optimal CAL is:
E (rC )  (1  y )  rf  y  E (rP )  rf  y  [ E (rP )  rf ]  .08  y  (.1561  .08)
Setting E(rC) = 14% we find: y = 0.7884 and (1 − y) = 0.2119 (the proportion invested
in the T-bill fund).
To find the proportions invested in each of the funds, multiply 0.7884 times the
respective proportions of stocks and bonds in the optimal risky portfolio:
Proportion of stocks in complete portfolio = 0.7884  0.4516 = 0.3560
Proportion of bonds in complete portfolio = 0.7884  0.5484 = 0.4323

10. Using only the stock and bond funds to achieve a portfolio expected return of 14%, we
must find the appropriate proportion in the stock fund (wS) and the appropriate proportion
in the bond fund (wB = 1 − wS) as follows:
0.14 = 0.20 × wS + 0.12 × (1 − wS) = 0.12 + 0.08 × wS  wS = 0.25
So the proportions are 25% invested in the stock fund and 75% in the bond fund. The
standard deviation of this portfolio will be:
σP = [(0.252  900) + (0.752  225) + (2  0.25  0.75  45)]1/2 = 14.13%
This is considerably greater than the standard deviation of 13.04% achieved using T-bills
and the optimal portfolio.

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