the context of a portfolio‚ the risk of an asset is divided into two parts: diversifiable risk (unsystematic risk) and market risk (systematic risk). Diversifiable risk arises from company-specific factors and hence can be washed away through diversification. Market risk stems from general market movements and hence cannot be diversified away. For a diversified investor what matters is the market risk and not the diversifiable risk. (4)In general‚ investors are risk-averse. So‚ they want to be compensated
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6: MEASUREMENT & EVALUATION OF RISK How does we Measure Risk? Understanding the nature of the risk is not adequate unless the investor or analyst is capable of expressing it in some quantitative terms. Expressing the risk of a stock in quantitative terms makes it comparable with other stocks. Measurement cannot be assures of percent accuracy because risk is caused by numerous factors as discussed above. Measurement provides an approximate quantification of risk. The statistical tool often used
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State Farm Risk Register Xavier Smith Western Governors University State Farm Risk Register State Farm has chosen to further to its already-existing operations in Canada‚ with the result of capturing millions of new customers. These customers will require both brick-and-mortar and telephonic support. Brick-and-mortar locations number in the thousands and continue to grow. With the acquisition of a greater number of customers‚ these locations will be able to absorb and support a respectable
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FLIRTING WITH RISK December 10 2012 Lecturer; Murat ERTUĞRUL Students ; 1.Enver ÖZTÜRK 18230741938 2.Erdinç ANAY 23326952518 3.Ramadan YALÇIN 38051102954 4. Demet BARIŞ 17492112456 FLIRTING WITH RISK 1. Imagine you are Bill. How would you explain to Mary the relationship between risk and return of individual stocks? As the risk increases the potential return increases as well. In order to get higher returns one needs to invest in riskier assets. In
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Types of forecasting There are two major types of forecasting‚ which can be broadly described as macro and micro: Macro forecasting is concerned with forecasting markets in total. This is about determining the existing level of Market Demand and considering what will happen to market demand in the future. Micro forecasting is concerned with detailed unit sales forecasts. This is about determining a product’s market share in a particular industry and considering what will happen to that market
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Disadvantages of Short Term financing. 5. Purpose of Short-Term Financing. 6. “Ideal Concept” of Short-Term Financing. 7. What is Trade Credit? 8. Reasons for the use of Trade Credit. 9. Factors determining the amount of Trade Credit used 10. Cost of Trade Credit 11. Who bears the cost of Trade Credit? 12. What is Bank Credit? 13. Distinction between Bank Credit and Short Term credit. 14. Characteristics of Short Term financing Meaning
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Lecture 1: Risk and Risk Aversion • This should mostly be review given your Microeconomics courses • Readings: ▪ Ingersoll – Chapter 1 ▪ Leroy and Werner Chapters 8 & 9 ▪ Ross – “Stronger Measures of Risk Aversion” The most interesting aspect of Asset Pricing‚ the focus of this course‚ considers how securities markets price risk (the time dimension alone is largely mechanical although there are interesting interactions between the two). For this question to
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RISK ANALYSIS AND MANAGEMENT PLAN 1. A) Likelihood: Once risks are identified‚ the next step is to determine the likelihood that the potential vulnerability can be exploited. Several factors need to be considered when determining this likelihood. First‚ the auditor needs to consider the source of the threat‚ the motivation behind the threat‚ and the capability of the source. Next‚ auditors need to determine the nature of the vulnerability and‚ finally‚ the existence and effectiveness of current
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Risk and Return: Portfolio Theory and Asset Pricing Models Portfolio Theory Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM) Efficient frontier Capital Market Line (CML) Security Market Line (SML) Beta calculation Arbitrage pricing theory Fama-French 3-factor model Portfolio Theory • Suppose Asset A has an expected return of 10 percent and a standard deviation of 20 percent. Asset B has an expected return of 16 percent and a standard deviation of 40 percent. If the correlation between A and B is 0.6
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portfolio return. b. portfolio weight. c. portfolio risk. d. rate of return. e. investment value. SYSTEMATIC RISK 3. Risk that affects a large number of assets‚ each to a greater or lesser degree‚ is called _____ risk. a. idiosyncratic b. diversifiable c. systematic d. asset-specific e. total UNSYSTEMATIC RISK 4. Risk that affects at most a small number of assets is called _____ risk. a. portfolio b. undiversifiable c. market
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