MRPL - Analyzing Risk and Return Submitted By- Sumer Lal Meena Exe-PGP 2007-09 � BACKGROUND READING THE CAPITAL ASSET PRICING MODEL (CAPM) Some‚ but not all‚ of the risk associated with a risky investment can be eliminated by diversification. The reason is that unsystematic risks‚ which are unique to individual assets‚ tend to wash out in a large portfolio‚ but systematic risks‚ which affect all of the assets in a portfolio to some extent‚ do not. Because unsystematic risk can be freely eliminated
Premium
P8-1 a) Expected Rate of Return $ $ $ Y 55‚000 6‚800 55‚000 X Previous Market Value Cash Flow Current Market Value X 20‚000 $ 1‚500 $ 21‚000 $ Y 12.50% 12.36% X: rt = (Ct + P rt = ($1‚50 rt = 0.125 = b) Both investments are equally risky. Keel should recommend Investment X because it has a Pt - Pt-1) / (Pt-1) Y: rt = (Ct + Pt - Pt-1) / (Pt-1) 0 + $21‚000 - $20‚000) / ($20‚000) rt = ($6‚800 + $55‚000 - $55‚000) / ($55‚00 = 12.5%
Premium Weighted average cost of capital Investment Time value of money
Discussion As observed at the 4th International Conference on Global e-Security in London in June 2008‚ Information Security Risk Management (ISRM) is a major concern of organizations worldwide. Although the number of existing ISRM methodologies is enormous‚ in practice a lot of resources are invested by organizations in creating new ISRM methodologies in order to capture more accurately the risks of their complex information systems. This is a crucial knowledge-intensive process for organizations
Premium Security Risk Information security
increase in the volatility of gold prices have on interest rates? Agenda History of gold Influencing factors of gold price Volatility of gold Conclusion Historical development Gold Standard ◦ Until 1914 + interwar years USD Standard – Bretton Woods System ◦ After WW II until 1971 Since 1972: gold disconnected from USD ◦ Ordinary traded good ◦ Price determined by supply and demand Revision: Influence factors of demand Wealth Expected returs Expected inflation Risk Liquidity So
Premium Bretton Woods system Inflation Supply and demand
Journal of Financial Economics 33 (1993) 3-56. North-Holland Common risk factors in the returns stocks and bonds* Eugene F. Fama and Kenneth on R. French Unirrrsit.v 01 Chicayo. Chiccup. I .L 60637‚ C;S;L Received July 1992. final version received September 1992 This paper identities five common risk factors in the returns on stocks and bonds. There are three stock-market factors: an overall market factor and factors related to firm size and book-to-market equity. There are two bond-market
Premium Stock Stock market Average
CHAPTER 10 Return and Risk: The Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM) Multiple Choice Questions I. DEFINITIONS PORTFOLIOS a 1. A portfolio is: a. a group of assets‚ such as stocks and bonds‚ held as a collective unit by an investor. b. the expected return on a risky asset. c. the expected return on a collection of risky assets. d. the variance of returns for a risky asset. e. the standard deviation of returns for a collection of risky assets. Difficulty level: Easy PORTFOLIO WEIGHTS
Premium
Chapter 12 Introduction to Simulation Using Risk Solver Platform 1 Chapter 12 Introduction to Simulation Using Risk Solver Platform This material is made available to instructors and students using Spreadsheet Modeling and Decision Analysis‚ 5e by Cliff T. Ragsdale‚ published by South-Western‚ a division of Cengage Learning. No part of this work may be reproduced or used in any form or by any means – graphic‚ electronic‚ or mechanical‚ including photocopying‚ recording‚ taping‚ Web distribution
Premium Cumulative distribution function Random variable Normal distribution
UNIVERSITY OF MEMPHIS I Ride To Only Be Free The Girl Who Loved Wild Horses Shunitra L. Ingram 5/19/2013 For some when getting sick‚ the traditional approach‚ when seeking treatment‚ is always better such as going to the doctor or locating their local pharmacy. Paul Goble’s “The Girl Who Loved Wild Horses” however illustrates a Native American girl that absolutely loved wild horses to the point that they (the horses) cured an illness she had that not only restored her health but her
Premium Caldecott Medal Native Americans in the United States Children's literature
Attitudes toward Risk and the Risk-Return Paradox: Prospect Theory Explanations Author(s): Avi Fiegenbaum and Howard Thomas Source: The Academy of Management Journal‚ Vol. 31‚ No. 1 (Mar.‚ 1988)‚ pp. 85-106 Published by: Academy of Management Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/256499 Accessed: 09-05-2015 03:52 UTC Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use‚ available at http://www.jstor.org/page/ info/about/policies/terms.jsp JSTOR is a not-for-profit
Premium Risk
P6–1 Interest rate fundamentals: The real rate of return Carl Foster‚ a trainee at an Investment banking firm‚ is trying to get an idea of what real rate of return investors Are expecting in today’s marketplace. He has looked up the rate paid on 3-month U.S. Treasury bills and found it to be 5.5%. He has decided to use the rate of change In the Consumer Price Index as a proxy for the inflationary expectations of Investors. That annualized rate now stands at 3%. On the basis of the information
Premium Interest Bond Interest rate