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MODERN INVESTMENT THEORY: A TRAVELOGUE

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Title: MODERN INVESTMENT THEORY: A TRAVELOGUE


1
MODERN INVESTMENT THEORYA TRAVELOGUE
  • BY
  • PROF. SANJAY SEHGAL
  • DEPARTMENT OF FINANCIAL STUDIES
  • UNIVERSITY OF DELHI SOUTH CAMPUS
  • NEW DELHI-110021
  • PH. 0091-11-24111552
  • Email sanjayfin15_at_yahoo.co.in

2
THE INVESTMENT DECISION PROCESS
  • Setting investment objectives
  • Determining acceptable risk level
  • Allocation strategy
  • - Asset mix
  • - Market mix
  • Security analysis and evaluation
  • Forming portfolios
  • Evaluating portfolio performance
  • Portfolio revision

3
PROMINENT INVESTMENT OBJECTIVES
  • Regular Income
  • Income on income
  • Capital appreciation
  • Tax incentives
  • Safety of capital
  • Maintaining liquidity
  • Hedging inflation

4
THE INVESTMENT DECISION FRAMEWORK
  • Maximize expected utility through wealth creation
  • Utility is an increasing function of return
  • Utility is a decreasing function of risk.

5
CONCEPT AND MEASUREMENT OF EXPECTED RETURN
  • Return for a single period
  • Capital appreciation Income flow
  • -------------------------------------------
  • Initial investment
  • Expected Return is measured as the average of
    single holding period returns.

6
CONCEPT AND MEASUREMENT OF RISK
  • NO. CONCEPT MEASURE
  • 1. Non-realization of expected return Standard
    deviation of returns
  • 2. Realized returns are lower than Semi-deviation
    of returns
  • expected returns
  • 3. Fear that initial investment will
    erode- Probability of obtaining negative
  • safety first returns

7
SYSTEMATIC SOURCES OF TOTAL RISK
  • Market index acts as a proxy for key macro
    economic shocks such as political upheavals, GDP
    growth rate, changes in the level of interest
    rate, inflation etc.
  • Systematic risk is owing to the sensitivity of
    stock returns to market returns.
  • Beta is the measure of systematic risk and is
    popularly known as the sensitivity co-efficient.

8
UNSYSTEMATIC SOURCES OF TOTAL RISK
  • Unsystematic risk by definition can be
    diversified away in a large portfolio.
  • Unsystematic risk may be caused by
  • - industry factors
  • - group factors
  • - common characteristics
  • - firm specific factors

9
COMBINING ASSETS TRADITIONAL PORTFOLIO THEORY
  • Portfolio managers should have a large number of
    securities across
  • sectors, groups and firm characteristics to
    destroy unsystematic risk
  • without sacrificing expected returns.

10
COMBINING ASSETS MODERN PORTFOLIO THEORY (MPT)
MARKOVITZ (1952, 1959)
  • Portfolio Managers should emphasize on quality
    and not the quantity of securities.
  • Quality is reflected by the interactive risk
    measured as correlation between security returns.
  • High quality is reflected by negative or at least
    low positive correlations.

11
MPT MAIN ASSUMPTIONS
  • Players
  • Investors are risk-averse and utility maximizers
  • They select investments on the basis of return
    and risk (the two parameter framework)
  • Securities
  • Risky securities
  • Playground
  • Perfect capital market
  • State of competitive equilibrium

12
THE PORTFOLIO SELECTION FRAMEWORK
  • MPT generates an efficient frontier which
    comprises of best portfolios.
  • Best portfolios provide highest returns within a
    given risk class and lowest risk within a given
    return class.
  • High risk-averse investors choose low return-risk
    portfolios, while low risk-averse investors
    choose high return-risk portfolios.

13
THE CAIPTAL MARKET THEORY (CMT)
  • Combinations of risk-free asset and the market
    portfolio (optimal risky assets) provide higher
    utility than MPT efficient portfolios.
  • High risk-averse investors by both the index fund
    and the risk-free assets (government bonds),
    while low risk-averse investors buy only the
    index fund by using personal as well as borrowed
    resources at risk-free rate of interest.
  • The market portfolio is proxied by the index fund.

14
TOBINS SEPARATION THEOREM
  • The investment and financing decisions of the
    investors are independent.
  • All investors decide to invest in the market
    portfolio.
  • They take financing decision through risk-free
    borrowing or lending depending on their level of
    risk-aversion.

15
LIMITATIONS OF CMT
  • CMT provides expected returns only on Sharpes
    efficient portfolios.
  • As all investors hold well-diversified market
    portfolio, systematic risk is the only relevant
    part of total risk.
  • CAPM is a model for pricing all securities and
    portfolios in the expected return-beta framework.

16
SHARPES CAPITAL ASSET PRICIGN MODEL
  • THE EQUATION
  • Required return of asset i Risk free return
    Market return - Risk free
  • return x Beta of asset I.
  • Price of time Price of risk x
    Amount of risk
  • Assets which provide higher returns than CAPM
    Line are undervalued and should be bought.
  • Assets with lower returns than CAPM line are
    overvalued and should be sold.

17
USES OF CAPM
  • Estimating fair rates of return on public utility
    companies.
  • Assessing stock market efficiency.
  • Estimating cost of capital and corporate
    valuation.
  • Evaluating performance of managed investment
    funds.

18
THE EFFICIENT MARKET HYPOTHESIS FAMA (1970)
  • Weak form
  • Semi-strong
  • Strong form

19
EFFICIENT MARKET HYPOTHESIS AND CAPM
  • EMH implies that all assets must enjoy the
    returns consistent with their risk levels.
  • Hence, tests of CAPM are also tests of market
    efficiency.

20
ARBITRAGE PRICING THEORY ROSS (1976)
  • We lift the veil and observe the economic factors
    that impact the market factor.
  • Security returns are generated by common economic
    factors.

21
INTER-TEMPORAL CAPM MERTON (1971, 1973)
  • There may be dynamic shocks to Markovitz
    efficient frontier owing to
  • - Future investment opportunities and rates of
    returns.
  • - Wage labour income.
  • Securities play a dual role - diversification as
    well as hedging.
  • Investors hedge these dynamic shocks resulting in
    a multi-factor framework for generating asset
    returns.

22
PROMINENT CAPM ANOMALIES
  • Size effect Banz (1981)
  • Value or BE/ME effect Chan, Hamao and Lakonishok
    (1989)
  • Earnings yield or E/P effect Basu (1983)
  • Leverage effect Bhandari (1988)
  • Reversal effect De Bondt and Thaler (1985)
  • Momentum effect Jegadeesh and Titman (1993)

23
FAMA-FRENCH THREE FACTOR MODEL(1993)
  • Asset returns are generated by the market, size
    and value factors
  • where
  • The market factor is defined as the difference
    between market return and risk-free return.
  • Size factor is defined as the difference in
    returns on small and big stock portfolios.
  • Value factor is defined as return on high BE/ME
    portfolios minus the returns on low BE/ME
    portfolios

24
SOURCES OF MOMENTUM PROFITS
  • Risk Explanation - Momentum profit may be an
    outcome of a missing risk factor.
  • See Fama French (1996), Carhart (1997), Conrad
    and Kaul (1998), Lewellen (2002), etc.
  • Behavioral Explanation - Momentum profits result
    owing to investors under-reaction to past
    information.
  • See Barferis, Shliefer and Vishny (1998),
    Daniel, Hirshleifer and Subrahmanyam (1998), Hong
    and Stein (1999), Jegadeesh and Titman (2001,
    2002), etc.

25
EMERGENCE OF BEHAVIOURAL FINANCE
  • Momentum and other behavioural anomalies
    highlight the inter-play of value traders and
    noise traders in financial markets.
  • The presence of noise-traders may lead to
    re-definition of existing investment paradigms.

26
MODERN INVESETMENT THEORY - THE ROAD AHEAD
  • Asset pricing models may have to include noise
    trader risk factor along with the fundamental
    factors.
  • The co-existence of value and noise traders may
    imply that stock markets are non-linear dynamical
    or chaotic systems. (Lawerence, Mendalbrotek)
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