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Panos Parpas

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Title: Panos Parpas


1
Asset Pricing Models

381 Computational Finance
  • Panos Parpas

Imperial College London
2
Problem Types in Investment Science
  • Determining
  • correct, arbitrage free price of an asset
  • price of a bond, a stock
  • the best action in an investment situation
  • how to find the best portfolio
  • how to devise the optimal strategy for managing
    an investment
  • Single period Markowitz model

3
Topics Covered
  • The Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM)
  • Single and Multi Factor Models
  • CAPM as a Factor Model
  • The Arbitrage Pricing Theory (APT)

4
M-V model
  • investor chooses portfolios on the efficient
    frontier deciding if given portfolio is on
    efficient frontier or not
  • no guarantee that a portfolio that was efficient
    ex ante will be efficient ex post
  • statistical considerations regarding time period
    over which to estimate which assets to include
    are non-trivial
  • not mention implications of m-v optimisation on
    asset pricing
  • CAPM describes MV portfolios and provides asset
    pricing

5
CAPM Capital Asset Pricing Model
  • developed by Sharpe, Lintner and Mossin
  • single period asset pricing model
  • determines correct price of a risky asset within
    the mean-variance framework
  • highlights the difference between systematic
    specific risk

6
Assumptions
  • All investors
  • are mean variance optimisers portfolios on
    efficient frontier
  • plan their investments over a single period of
    time
  • use the same probability distribution of asset
    returns the same mean, variance, covariance of
    asset returns
  • borrow and lend at the risk free rate
  • are price-takers investors purchases sales
    do NOT influence price of an asset
  • There is no transaction costs and taxes

7
Market Portfolio
  • Everyone purchases single fund of risky asset,
    borrows (lends)
  • at risk-free rate.
  • Form a portfolio that is a mix of risk free
    asset and single risky fund
  • Mix of the risky asset with risk free asset will
    vary across individuals
  • according to their individual tastes for risk
  • Seek to avoid risk have high percentage of the
    risk free asset in their portfolio
  • More aggressive to risk have a high percentage
    of the risky asset
  • What is the fund that everyone purchases?
  • This fund is Market Portfolio and defined as
    summation of all assets total invested wealth
    on risky assets
  • An asset weight in market portfolio is the
    proportion of that assets total capital value to
    total market capital value capitalization
    weights

8
The Capital Market Line (CML)
  • Consider single efficient fund of risky assets
    (market portfolio) and a risk free asset (a bond
    matures at the end of investment horizon)
  • If a risk free asset does not exist, investor
    would take positions at various points on the
    efficient frontier. Otherwise, efficient set
    consists of straight line called CML.
  • Pricing Line prices are adjusted so that
    efficient assets fall on this line
  • CML describes all possible mean-variance
    efficient portfolios that are a combination of
    the risk free asset and market portfolio
  • Investors take positions on CML by
  • buying risk free asset (between M and rf) or
  • selling risk free asset (beyond point M) and
  • holding the same portfolio of risky assets

9
The Capital Market Line
  • Equation describes all portfolios on CML
  • CML relates the expected rate of return of an
    efficient portfolio to its standard deviation
  • The slope the CML is called the price of RISK!
  • How much expected rate of return of a portfolio
    must increase if the risk of the portfolio
    increases by one unit?

Expected Value of market rate of return
Standard Deviation of market rate of return
10
The Pricing Model
  • How does the expected rate of return of an
    individual asset relate to its individual risk?
  • If the market portfolio M is efficient, then the
    expected return of an asset i satisfies
  • The beta of an asset (risk premium)

11
The Pricing Model
  • expected excess rate of return of an asset is
    proportional to the expected excess rate of
    return of the market portfolio proportional
    factor is the beta of asset.
  • Amount that rate of return is expected to exceed
    risk free rate is proportional the amount that
    market portfolio return is expected to exceed
    risk free rate

describes relationship between risk and expected
return of asset
12
Beta of an Asset
  • beta of an asset measures the risk of the asset
    with respect to the market portfolio M.
  • high beta assets earn higher average return in
    equilibrium because of
  • beta of market portfolio average risk of all
    assets

13
The Beta of Portfolio
  • If the betas of the individual assets are known,
    then the beta of the portfolio is
  • This can be shown by using
  • rate of return of the portfolio
  • covariance

14
Systematic and Specific Risk
  • CAPM divides total risk of holding risky assets
    into two parts
  • systematic (risk of holding the market portfolio)
    and specific risk
  • Consider the random rate of return of an asset
    i
  • Take expected value and the correlation of the
    rate of return with rM
  • The total risk of holding risky asset i is

15
Summary CAPM
  • The capital market line expected rate of return
    of an efficient portfolio to its standard
    deviation
  • The pricing model expected rate of return of an
    individual asset to its risk
  • The risk of holding an asset i is

16
Beta of the Market
  • Average risk of all assets is 1 (beta of the
    market portfolio)
  • Beta of market portfolio is used as a reference
    point to measure risk of other assets.
  • Assets or portfolios with betas greater than 1
    are above average risk tend to move more than
    market. Example
  • If risk free rate is 5 per year and market rises
    by 10 , then assets with a beta of 2 will tend
    to increase by 15.
  • If market falls by 10, then assets with a beta
    of 2 will tend to fall by 25 on average.
  • Assets or portfolios with betas less than 1 are
    of below average risk tend to move less than
    market.

Capital Market Line
Security Market Line
M
M
17
CAPM as a Pricing Formula
  • CAPM is a pricing model.
  • standard CAPM formula only holds expected rates
    of return
  • suppose an asset is purchased at price P and
    later sold at price S.
  • rate of return is substituted in CAPM formula

18
Discounting Formula in CAPM
19
Single-Factor Model
  • Consider n assets with rates of return ri for
    i1,2,,n and one factor f which is a random
    quantity such as inflation, interest rate
  • Assume that the rates of return and single
    factor are linearly related.
  • Errors
  • have zero mean
  • are uncorrelated with the factor
  • are uncorrelated with each other

Factor Loadings
Intercept
Error
20
Multi-Factor Model
  • Single factor model is extended to have more
    than one factor.
  • For two factors f1 and f2 the model can be
    written as
  • For k number factors

21
How to Select Factors?
  • Factors are external to securities
  • consumer price index, unemployment rate
  • Factors are extracted from known information
    about security returns
  • the rate of return on the market portfolio
  • Firm characteristics
  • price earning ratio, dividend payout ratio
  • How to select factors It is part science and
    part art!
  • Statistical approach principal component
    analysis
  • Economical approach its beta, inflation rate,
    interest rate, industrial production etc.

22
The CAPM as a Factor Model
  • Special case of a single-factor model f rM

23
The CAPM as a Factor Model Example
  • Single factor model equation defines a linear fit
    to data
  • Imagine several independent observations of
    the rate of return and factor
  • Straight line defined by single factor model
    equation is fitted through these points
    such that average value of errors is zero.
  • Error is measured by the vertical distance
    from a point to the line

24
Arbitrage The law of one price
  • Arbitrage relies on a fundamental principle of
    finance the law of one price
  • says security must have the same price
    regardless of the means of creating that
    security.
  • implies if the payoff of a security can be
    synthetically created by a package of other
    securities, the price of the package and the
    price of the security whose payoff replicates
    must be equal.

25
Arbitrage Example
  • How can you produce an arbitrage opportunity
    involving securities A, B,C?
  • Replicating Portfolio
  • combine securities A and B in such a way that
  • replicate the payoffs of security C in either
    state
  • Let wA and wB be proportions of security A and B
    in portfolio

26
Example Continued
  • Payoff of the portfolio
  • Create a portfolio consisting of A and B that
    will reproduce the payoff of C regardless of the
    state that occurs one year from now.
  • Solving equation system, weights are found wB
    0.6 and wA 0.4
  • An arbitrage opportunity will exist if the cost
    of this portfolio is different than the cost of
    security C.
  • Cost of the portfolio is 0.4 x 70 0.6 x 60
    64 - price of security C is 80. The synthetic
    security is cheap relative to security C.

27
Example Continued
  • Riskless arbitrage profit is obtained by buying
    A and B in these proportions and shorting
    security C.
  • Suppose you have 1m capital to construct this
    arbitrage portfolio.
  • Investing 400k in A 400k ? 70
    5714 shares
  • Investing 600k in B 600k ? 60
    10,000 shares
  • Shorting 1m in C 1m ? 80
    12,500 shares

The outcome of forming an arbitrage portfolio of
1m
28
The Arbitrage Pricing Theory
  • CAPM is criticised for two assumptions
  • The investors are mean-variance optimizers
  • The model is single-period
  • Stephen Ross developed an alternative model
    based purely on arbitrage arguments
  • Published Paper
  • The Arbitrage Pricing Theory of Capital Asset
    Pricing, Journal of Economic Theory, Dec 1976.

29
APT versus CAPM
  • APT is a more general approach to asset pricing
    than CAPM.
  • CAPM considers variances and covariance's as
    possible measures of risk while APT allows for a
    number of risk factors.
  • APT postulates that a securitys expected return
    is influenced by a variety of factors, as opposed
    to just the single market index of CAPM
  • APT in contrast states that return on a security
    is linearly related to factors.
  • APT does not specify what factors are, but
    assumes that the relationship between security
    returns and factors is linear.

30
Simple Version of APT
  • Consider a single factor model.
  • Assume that the model holds exactly no error
  • The uncertainty comes from the factor f
  • APT says that ai and bi are related if there
  • is no arbitrage

31
Derivation of APT
  • Choose another asset j such that
  • Form a portfolio from asset i and j with weights
    of w and (1-w)
  • Choose w so that the coefficient of factor is
    zero so

32
Derivation of APT
ai and bi are not independent
33
Arbitrage Pricing Formula
  • Once constants are known, the expected rate of
    return of an asset i is determined by the factor
    loading.
  • The expected rate of return of asset i



  • CAPM?

34
CAPM as a consequence of APT
  • The factor is the rate of return on the market
  • APT is identical to the CAPM with
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