MI Chapter 1 Reilly N Brown
MI Chapter 1 Reilly N Brown
MI Chapter 1 Reilly N Brown
Portfolio Management
Eighth Edition
by
Frank K. Reilly & Keith C. Brown
Chapter 1
The Investment Setting
Questions to be answered:
Why do individuals invest ?
What is an investment ?
How do we measure the rate of return on an investment ?
How do investors measure risk related to alternative
investments ?
What factors contribute to the rate of return that an
investor requires on an investment?
What macroeconomic and microeconomic factors
contribute to changes in the required rate of return for an
investment?
Why Do Individuals Invest ?
By saving money (instead of spending
it), individuals forego consumption
today in return for a larger consumption
tomorrow.
How Do We Measure The Rate Of
Return On An Investment ?
The real rate of interest is the exchange rate between
future consumption (future dollars) and present
consumption (current dollars). Market forces
determine this rate.
Today
Tomorrow
$100
$104
If you are willing to exchange a
certain payment of $100 today
for a certain payment of $104
tomorrow, then the pure or real
rate of interest is 4%
If the purchasing power of the future payment will
be diminished in value due to inflation, an investor
will demand an inflation premium to compensate
them for the expected loss of purchasing power.
If the future payment from the investment is not
certain, an investor will demand a risk premium to
compensate for the investment risk.
How Do We Measure The Rate Of
Return On An Investment ?
Defining an Investment
Any investment involves a current commitment of
funds for some period of time in order to derive
future payments that will compensate for:
the time the funds are committed (the real rate of return)
the expected rate of inflation (inflation premium)
uncertainty of future flow of funds (risk premium)
Measures of
Historical Rates of Return
% 10 10 . 0
$200
200 - $220
or
P
P P
HPR
0
0 1
=
=
=
1.1
Where:
HPR = Holding period return
P
0
= Beginning value
P
1
= Ending value
Holding Period Return
Measures of
Historical Rates of Return
Annualizing the HPR
( ) 1 1
1
+ =
N
HPR EAR
Where:
EAR = Equivalent Annual Return
HPR = Holding Period Return
N = Number of years
Example: You bought a stock for $10 and sold it for $18 six years
later. What is your HPR & EAR?
Calculating HPR & EAR
Solution:
% 80 80 . 0
$10
10 - $18
or
P
P P
HPR
0
0 1
=
=
=
( )
( )
% 29 . 10
1 80 . 1
1 1
6
1
1
=
=
+ =
N
HPR EAR
Step #1:
Step #2:
Measures of
Historical Rates of Return
1 2
...
N
R R R
AM
N
+ + +
=
Arithmetic Mean
( )( ) ( )
1
1 2
1 1 ... 1 1
N
N
GM R R R = + + + (
Where:
AM = Arithmetic Mean
GM = Geometric Mean
R
i
= Annual HPRs
N = Number of years
Geometric Mean
Example
You are reviewing an investment with the following
price history as of December 31
st
each year.
Calculate:
The HPR for the entire period
The annual HPRs
The Arithmetic mean of the annual HPRs
The Geometric mean of the annual HPRs
1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006
$18.45 $21.15 $16.75 $22.45 $19.85 $24.10 $24.10 $26.50
A Portfolio of Investments
The mean historical rate of return for a
portfolio of investments is measured as
the weighted average of the HPRs for
the individual investments in the
portfolio, or the overall change in the
value of the original portfolio
Computation of Holding
Period Return for a Portfolio
# Begin Beginning Ending Ending Market Wtd.
Stock Shares Price Mkt. Value Price Mkt. Value HPR Wt. HPR
A 100,000 10 $ 1,000,000 $ 12 $ 1,200,000 $ 0.20 0.05 0.010
B 200,000 20 $ 4,000,000 $ 21 $ 4,200,000 $ 0.05 0.20 0.010
C 500,000 30 $ 15,000,000 $ 33 $ 16,500,000 $ 0.10 0.75 0.075
Total 20,000,000 $ 21,900,000 $ 0.095
1 0
0
21, 900, 000 20, 000, 000
20, 000, 000
9.5%
Portfolio
P P
HPR
P
=
=
Expected Rates of Return
Risk is the uncertainty whether an investment will earn its
expected rate of return
Probability is the likelihood of an outcome
) )(R P (
Return) (Possible Return) of y Probabilit ( ) E(R
1
1
i
i i
n
i
n
i
=
=
=
=
Risk Aversion
Much of modern finance is based on the principle
that investors are risk averse
Risk aversion refers to the assumption that, all else
being equal, most investors will choose the least
risky alternative and that they will not accept
additional risk unless they are compensated in the
form of higher return
Probability Distributions
Risk-free Investment
0.00
0.20
0.40
0.60
0.80
1.00
-5% 0% 5% 10% 15%
Probability Distributions
Risky Investment with 3 Possible Returns
0.00
0.20
0.40
0.60
0.80
1.00
-30% -10% 10% 30%
Probability Distributions
Risky investment with ten possible rates of return
0.00
0.20
0.40
0.60
0.80
1.00
-40% -20% 0% 20% 40%
Measuring Risk: Historical Returns
( ) | |
N
HPR E
i
=
=
n
1 i
2
i
2
HPR
o
Where:
= Variance (of the pop)
HPR = Holding Period Return i
E(HPR)
i
= Expected HPR*
N = Number of years
2
o
* The E(HPR) is equal to the arithmetic mean of the series of
returns.
Measuring Risk:
Expected Rates of Return
| |
2
2
i i
1
(P ) R E(R)
n
i
o
=
=
Where:
= Variance
R
i
= Return in period i
E(R) = Expected Return
P
i
= Probability of R
i
occurring
2
o
Note: Because we multiply by
the probability of each return
occurring, we do NOT divide by
N. If each probability is the
same for all returns, then the
variance can be calculated by
either multiplying by the
probability or dividing by N.
Measuring Risk: Standard
Deviation
Standard Deviation is the square root of the variance
2
i i i
1
1
2
2
i i i
1
P[R -E(R )]
P[R -E(R )]
n
i
n
i
o
=
=
=
| |
=
|
\ .