Lecture 8.2 (Capm and Apt)
Lecture 8.2 (Capm and Apt)
• Diversification
• Systematic risk
efficient portfolio?
individual security?
The CAPM Theory
• Capital market line does not show the risk-return trade off for other
portfolios and individual securities.
• Inefficient portfolios lies below the CML and risk return relationship with
the help of CML cannot be established.
• The beta analysis is useful for individual securities and portfolios whether
efficient or inefficient.
• Security market line (SML) is the graphical representation of the CAPM. It displays
the expected rate of return of an individual security as a function of systematic, non
diversifiable risk(its beta).
The x-axis represents the risk (beta), and the y-axis represents the expected return.
The market risk premium is determined from the slope of the SML. The Security
Market Line, seen here in a graph, describes a relation between the beta and the
asset's expected rate of return.
• For individual securities, we make use of the (SML) and its relation to
expected return and systematic risk(beta) to show how the market
must price individual securities in relation to their security risk class.
The SML enables us to calculate the reward-to-risk ratio for any
security in relation to that of the overall market.
• If the security's risk versus expected return is plotted above the SML,
it is undervalued because the investor can expect a greater return for
the inherent risk. A security plotted below the SML is
overvalued because the investor would be accepting less return for
the amount of risk assumed.
SECURITY MARKET LINE
E(R M ) - R f
E(R i ) = R f + C iM
M
iM
βi =
M
E (R i ) = R f + [ E (R M ) - R f ] β i
EXPECTED •P
RETURN SML
14%
8% •0
1.0
βi
Evaluation of Securities with SML
Y
Rp T
S
R C
SML
B
A
W
Rf
V
U
X
0.9 1.0 1.1 1.2
B eta
Find out the under-priced and overpriced
securities
Security Expected return Beta
A 0.33 1.7
B 0.13 1.4
C 0.26 1.1
D 0.12 0.95
E 0.21 1.05
F 0.14 .70
Nifty 0.13 1
T-bills 0.09 0
It's not entirely clear. The big sticking point is beta. When professors Eugene Fama
and Kenneth French looked at share returns on the New York Stock Exchange, the
American Stock Exchange and Nasdaq between 1963 and 1990, they found that
differences in betas over that lengthy period did not explain the performance of
different stocks. The linear relationship between beta and individual stock returns
also breaks down over shorter periods of time. These findings seem to suggest that
CAPM may be wrong.
• While some studies raise doubts about CAPM's validity, the model is still widely
used in the investment community. Although it is difficult to predict from beta how
individual stocks might react to particular movements, investors can probably
safely deduce that a portfolio of high-beta stocks will move more than the market
in either direction, and a portfolio of low-beta stocks will move less than the
market.
Conclusion:The capital asset pricing model is by no means a perfect theory. But the
spirit of CAPM is correct. It provides a usable measure of risk that helps investors
determine what return they deserve for putting their money at risk.
Arbitrage
Weights are the changes made in the proportion. For example bA, bB
and bC are the sensitivities, in an arbitrage portfolio the sensitivities
become zero.
bA XA + bB XB + bC XC = 0
APT Model
• Additionally, the APT can be seen as a "supply-side" model, since its beta
coefficients reflect the sensitivity of the underlying asset to economic factors.
Thus, factor shocks would cause structural changes in assets' expected returns, or
in the case of stocks, in firms' profitabilities.
• On the other side, the CML is considered a "demand side" model. Its results,
although similar to those of the APT, arise from a maximization problem of each
investor's utility function, and from the resulting market equilibrium (investors
are considered to be the "consumers" of the assets).
• Arbitrage pricing theory does not rely on measuring the
performance of the market. Instead, APT directly relates
the price of the security to the fundamental factors driving
it. The problem with this is that the theory in itself provides
no indication of what these factors are, so they need to be
empirically determined. Obvious factors include economic
growth and interest rates. For companies in some sectors
other factors are obviously relevant as well - such as
consumer spending for retailers.
• The potentially large number of factors means more betas to
be calculated. There is also no guarantee that all the
relevant factors have been identified. This added complexity
is the reason arbitrage pricing theory is far less widely used
than CAPM.
APT and CAPM
The simplest form of APT model is consistent with
the simple form of the CAPM model.
APT is more general and less restrictive than CAPM.
The APT model takes into account of the impact of
numerous factors on the security.
The market portfolio is well defined conceptually. In
APT model, factors are not well specified.
There is a lack of consistency in the measurements of
the APT model.
The influences of the factors are not independent of
each other.
Question
• The beta co-efficient of security ‘A’ is 1.6. The risk free rate of return is 12%
and the required rate of return is 18% on the market portfolio. If the
dividend expected during the coming year is 2.50 and the growth rate of
dividend and earnings is 8%, at what price should the security ‘A’ can be
sold based on the CAPM.
• =12% + 1.6 (18% – 12%) = 12% + 9.6% = 21.6%
Price of security ‘A’ is calculated with the use of dividend growth model formula:
d1
Re=P0 + g
Where,
D1 = Expected dividend during the coming year
Re = Expected rate of return on security ‘A’
g = Growth rate of dividend
P0 = Price of security ‘A’
.216=2.5/ P0+.08
.216=2.5/ P0+.08/1
.216=2.5/ P0+.08 P0 /1
.216 P0-.08 P0 =2.50
.0136P0=2.50
P0 =2.50/.0136=18.38
Chapter Summary