Chapter 6 Risk & Return New
Chapter 6 Risk & Return New
The supply curve slopes up from left to right because the higher the real interest
rate, the greater the supply of household savings.
The demand curve slopes down from left to right because the lower the real interest
rate, the more businesses will want to invest in physical capital.
DETERMINATION OF THE EQUILIBRIUM REAL
RATE OF INTEREST
The government and the central
bank can shift these supply and
demand curves either to the right or
to the left through fiscal and
monetary policies.
For example, consider an increase in
the government’s budget deficit
EQUILIBRIUM NOMINAL RATE OF
INTEREST
TAXES AND THE REAL RATE OF INTEREST
TAXES AND THE REAL RATE OF INTEREST
For example, you are in a 30% tax bracket and your investments provide a
nominal return of 12% while inflation runs at 8%
Your before-tax real rate is approximately 4%
After-tax real return of 4%(1 − 0.3) = 2.8%.
But the tax code does not recognize that the first 8% of your return is only
compensation for inflation—not real income. Your after-tax nominal return is
12%(1 − 0.3) = 8.4%, so your after-tax real interest rate is only 8.4% − 8%
= 0.4%.
your after-tax real return has fallen by it = 8% × 0.3 = 2.4%.
COMPARING RATES OF
RETURN FOR DIFFERENT 6.2
HOLDING PERIODS
COMPARING RATES OF RETURN FOR
DIFFERENT HOLDING PERIODS
COMPARING RATES OF RETURN FOR
DIFFERENT HOLDING PERIODS
EFFECTIVE ANNUAL RATE VERSUS TOTAL
RETURN
To compare returns on investments with differing horizons. We express each
total return as a rate of return for a common period.
We typically express all investment returns as an effective annual rate (EAR),
defined as the percentage increase in funds invested over a 1-year horizon.
For a 1-year investment, the EAR equals the total return, rf (1), and the gross
return, (1 + EAR), is the terminal value of a $1 investment
In general, we can relate EAR to the total return, rf (T), over a holding period
of length T by using the following equation:
EFFECTIVE ANNUAL RATE VERSUS TOTAL
RETURN
ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATES
Annualized rates on short-term investments (by convention, T < 1 year) often are
reported using simple rather than compound interest. These are called annual
percentage rates, or APRs.
If there are n compounding periods in a year, and the per-period rate is rf (T), then
APR = n × rf (T). The APR of the 6-month bond rate of 2.71% is 2 × 2.71 = 5.42%
Conversely, you can find the per-period rate from the APR as rf (T) = APR/n, or
equivalently, as T × APR
RISK AND RISK PREMIUMS 6.3
HOLDING PERIOD RETURN
Rates of Return: Single Period
Rate of return on your investment will depend on
(a) the price per share at year’s end and
(b) the cash dividends you will collect over the year
HPR = Holding Period Return
P0 = Beginning price
P1 = Ending price
D1 = Dividend during period one
HOLDING PERIOD RETURN
Suppose the price per share at year’s end is $110 and cash dividends over the
year amount to $4
Ending Price = 110
Beginning Price = 100
Dividend = 4
•LPSD: similar to usual standard deviation, but uses only negative deviations
from risk free rate
•Sortino Ratio replaces Sharpe Ratio