L05 Captial Allocation
L05 Captial Allocation
Jianxin Wang
Today’s Topics
Characterizing investors
Utility function
Risk preference
Capital allocation
Capital allocation line
Optimal allocation
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Utility Function
A numerical representation of well being.
Two basic assumptions
Utility increases with wealth (W)
Marginal utility decreases with wealth
• Risk aversion: losing hurts more than winning pleases
Examples:
U(W) = ln(W)
U[E(r),] = E(r) - 0.5A2
where E(r) and 2 are expected return and risk, and A is
the parameter for risk aversion
U(50)=3.9
Losing Winning
Wealth
50 100 150
Losing $50 hurts more than
winning $50 pleases.
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Indifference Curves
Expected Return
Feasible choice set
Optimal
choice
Indifference curves
Increasing Utility
Risk
Risk neutral: A = 0
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Mean-Variance Criterion
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Capital Allocation
Risk-free return
In reality, there are many assets with no default risk, but
with (small) price risk: T-bills, CP, money market funds, etc.
For a given investment horizon, there may not be a truly
risk-free asset.
We assume that there is always a risk-free asset with a
return rf known before investing.
A portfolio of risky assets
How to mix risky assets is discussed later.
How much of your fund should be allocated to the
risk-free asset and the risky portfolio?
The best combination of the risk-free and risky assets.
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22% C
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22% C
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CAL
E(r)
Indifference curves
CL
Less risk-averse investors borrow
money to invest in risky assets
CH P
High risk-averse investors hold
rf both risk-free and risky assets
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Passive Investment
Invest in a broad market index: P = M (market)
Exposed to market risk only. No firm-specific risk.
Much higher long-term returns than bank deposits.
Low cost in terms of money, time, and emotion:
free-ride on research by others.
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