3. Investment Planning. 9. Portfolio Management and Measurements Flashcards

1
Q

Stocks can provide high returns but are considered higher risk than other securities. Money market instruments are considered safe, but provide low yields. Is there an investment out there that has high returns and low risk? In 1952, Harry Markowitz published a landmark paper that is viewed as the origin of modern portfolio theory. Markowitz observes that investors seek to both maximize expected return and minimize uncertainty (that is, risk defined as a standard deviation of expected returns). He suggested that these two conflicting objectives must be balanced against each other when making a purchase decision. The Markowitz approach to attaining these dueling objectives states that investors should diversify by purchasing not just one security but several, thus creating a portfolio of securities. Thus Markowitz proposes to look at risk and return not at an individual security level but for an entire portfolio.

A

The Portfolio Management and Measurements module, which should take approximately four hours to complete, is designed to give an overview of various portfolio management topics and measurement concepts. First, you will be introduced to concepts of modern portfolio theory. Then, the module covers return measurements, benchmarks, performance measures, and probability forecasting.

Upon completion of this module you should be able to:
* Discuss modern portfolio theory, and
* Evaluate portfolio performance.

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2
Q

All investors wish to make fortunes from the market. However, the first thing one should understand before investing is that every investment has its own degree of risk associated with it. So, before committing a single dollar to a portfolio, individuals need to remember that there are unavoidable but manageable risks. To minimize risks and maximize returns when investing in a portfolio, the rule is to build a portfolio that includes securities from different asset classes. This calls for intelligent portfolio management.

A

An approach in this area is the Modern Portfolio Theory (MPT) developed by Harry Markowitz. The MPT has profoundly shaped how institutional portfolios are managed, and prompted the use of passive investment management techniques. The mathematics of MPT is used extensively in financial risk management.

To ensure that you have a solid understanding of portfolio management and measurements, the following lessons will be covered in this module:
* Modern Portfolio Theory
* Performance Measures

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3
Q

Section 1 - Modern Portfolio Theory

Most securities available for investment have uncertain outcomes and are thus risky. The basic problem facing each investor is to determine the type of risky securities to own. Investors must select the optimal portfolio from a set of possible portfolios that has the perfect combination of the best return and the most certainty, otherwise known as the portfolio selection problem. The solution to this problem is to follow the Modern Portfolio Theory (MPT) approach to investing, put forth in 1952 by Harry M. Markowitz.

The Modern Portfolio Theory explores how risk-averse investors construct portfolios in order to optimize expected returns against market risk. In fact, MPT quantifies diversification.

A

To ensure that you have a solid understanding of modern portfolio theory, the following topics will be covered in this lesson:
* Initial and Terminal Wealth
* Non-satiation and Risk Aversion
* Expected Return and Standard Deviation

Upon completion of this lesson, you should be able to:
* Calculate the rate of return, and initial and terminal wealth,
* Identify risk-averse investors, and
* Calculate returns and standard deviation for portfolios.

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4
Q

Describe Initial and Terminal Wealth

A

When investing in different securities, the percentage of change in an investor’s wealth from the beginning to the end of the year can be calculated in terms of the rate of return as:

HPR = ((P1 - P0 )+D)/P0, or Holding Period Return = ((End-of-Period Wealth - Beginning-of-Period Wealth) + Income)/Beginning-of-Period Wealth

The above formula is used to calculate the one-period rate of return on a security, where beginning-of-period wealth is the purchase price of one unit of the security at t = 0. The end-of-period wealth is the market value of the unit at t = 1, along with the value of any cash (and cash equivalents) paid to the owner of the security between t = 0 and t = 1.

One must also remember that in the calculation of the return on a security, it is assumed that a hypothetical investor purchased one unit of the security at the beginning of the period.

TEST TIP
Since the formulas on the distributed formula sheet for the CFP Certification Exam are not labeled, it is as important to recognize a formula by its components. Most questions that offer a beginning wealth (or price) and an ending wealth (or price) will have something to do with the Holding Period Return equation. The equation could also be manipulated where the return is given and you must solve for the ending or beginning wealth (price).

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5
Q

Calculate the above portfolio’s expected rate of return using the terminal versus the initial value.
* 22%
* 23%
* 16%
* 25%

A

22%
* Portfolio Expected Return =
* ($20,984 - $17,200) ÷ $17,200
* = 0.22, or 22%

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6
Q

How do you calculate Portfolio Expected Returns?

A

An alternative method for calculating the expected return on this portfolio is shown below. This procedure involves calculating the expected return on a portfolio as the weighted average of the expected returns on its component securities. The relative market values of the securities in the portfolio are used as weights. In symbols, the general rule for calculating the expected return on a portfolio consisting of N securities is:

rp=∑Nj=1Xjr⎯⎯i=X1r⎯⎯1+X2r2+…+XNr⎯⎯N
where:
rp = the expected return of the portfolio
XI = the proportion of the portfolio’s initial value invested in security I
rI = the expected return of security I
N = the number of securities in the portfolio

TEST TIP
The formula sheet for the CFP examination has the following formula for determining the expected return of a portfolio, also know as the Capital Market Line. This equation assumes the existence of both systematic and nonsystematic risks:
Rp= Rf + SDP[(Rm – Rf)/SDm]

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7
Q

What is the portfolio’s expected rate of return?
* 8.22%
* 22%
* 3.77%
* 10.01%

A

22%
* Portfolio Expected Return = The sum of the contribution to portfolio expected returns =
* 3.77% + 10.01% + 8.22%
* = 22%

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8
Q

Describe Correlation

A

Closely related to covariance is the statistical measure known as correlation coefficient. In fact, when it comes to diversification, the correlation coefficient is the most important statistic.

Correlation coefficients always lie between -1.0 and +1.0.
A value of +1.0 represents perfect positive correlation.
A value of -1.0 represents perfect negative correlation.

In the real world, most financial assets have positive correlation coefficients ranging in value from 0.4 to 0.9. However, for purposes of diversification, combining assets with anything other than perfect positive (+1.0) correlation will have diversification benefits. The lower the coefficient (e.g., 0.4 vs. 0.7) the better, and negative is much better than positive. If you could ever find perfect negatively correlated assets (in theory anyway), you could have zero risk with just two assets. Your return would be with complete certainty.

The difference between correlation coefficient and covariance is that covariance is more of a refined statistic, designed to take to specific asset risk into account. Correlation coefficients are raw figures, which simply measure the degree of variation between two assets returns from one period to the next.

The correlation coefficient squared is known as the coefficient of determination in the statistical-world, but commonly known as R squared in the every-day world. The R squared is another extremely important statistic, in that it tells you the degree to which a fund or a portfolio is diversified. Technically, it tells you the degree to which a dependent variable’s variation in returns (say a stock mutual fund), are explained by the variation of returns of an independent variable (say a benchmark such as the S&P). To now think of this statistic in a managerial context is the key. For example, If I have a fund with an R squared of 0.92, that tells me that 92% of the variation of the funds returns are due to systematic forces (nondiversifiable). More importantly, it tells me 8% of the variation of the funds returns are due to unsystematic or diversifiable risk.

TEST TIP
Beta is not an appropriate measure of risk in situations when the portfolio being analyzed has a R squared below .70. This also has ramifications for the appropriateness of performance indices that use beta (Treynor and Jensen).

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9
Q

According to the CAPM, which of the four is the most efficient?
* Asset A has a return of 14%; beta=1.25; standard deviation=18%
* Asset B has a return of 10%; beta=1.15; standard deviation=14%
* Asset C has a return of 19%; beta=1.45; standard deviation=24%
* Asset D has a return of 17%; beta=1.25; standard deviation=21%

A

Asset D has a return of 17%; beta=1.25; standard deviation=21%
* Based on the information provided, the risk assessment investment statistic under the CAPM that details relative efficiency is Coefficient of Variation, which is Standard Deviation, divided by return. Since the risk measure is the numerator, the lower the result the better the risk-return relationship; that is, it is more efficient.
* The CV for asset D is 1.235 which is the lowest. Simply, for every unit of return (for which Asset D has 17), there is 1.235 units of risk. Asset A, B, and C have CV of 1.286, 1.4 and 1.263, respectively.

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10
Q

Section 1 - Modern Portfolio Theory Summary

What is the ideal investment? Something that has high returns and low risks! Unfortunately, in the investment world, higher returns usually come with higher risks (uncertainty of the ability to achieve the higher return). To solve this problem, Markowitz came up with the Modern Portfolio Theory. The theory proposes that investors consider not only the return of the investment, but also the amount of risk they are willing to take to attain it. It also suggests that a portfolio of securities can be built considering the combined effect of expected return while consisting of a combination of securities whose covariance and correlation will create a certain level of risk. A risk-averse investor has baskets of portfolios where they are indifferent due to the combination of risk and return. The optimal portfolio is the one that lies in the indifference basket that offers the investor the highest return with the lowest uncertainty.

In this lesson, we have covered the following:

A
  • Initial and terminal wealth: Used to calculate the rate of return and help to decide the expected returns and standard deviations for portfolios.
  • Expected return and standard deviation: Expected returns can be determined based on the terminal versus initial value or a weighted sum of the securities’ expected return. The risk (standard deviation) of a portfolio can be determined using the double summation method, which examines the securities’ covariance and correlation.

PRACTITIONER ADVICE
Computer programs are available to help determine portfolio return and risk data. It is more important to understand how they work and what they mean to an investor. A conversation about covariance may confuse a novice investor more than it helps. However, if your clients were directed to certain statistics such as R-squared on sales material or third party rating reports, it would be helpful for you to know what these statistics mean to a portfolio’s expected risk and return.

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11
Q

Markowitz asserts that investors should base their portfolio decisions solely on two variables.
* Initial and terminal wealth
* Non-satiation and marginal utility
* Variance and covariance
* Expected returns and standard deviations

A

Expected returns and standard deviations
* According to Markowitz, the investor should view the rate of return associated with any portfolio by considering the random variables of expected (or mean) value and standard deviation.

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12
Q

Investors will less likely make an investment when there is an alternative to make the same amount of money with more certainty. This statement assumes that investors are:
* Risk-averse
* Risk-seeking
* Risk-neutral

A

Risk-averse
* It is assumed that investors are risk-averse, which means that the investor will choose a portfolio with a smaller standard deviation.
* Risk-averse investors are willing to forego some expected terminal wealth (that is, accept lower expected returns) in exchange for less risk.

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13
Q

If an investor invests 50% in IBM which returned 20%, 30% in Texaco which returned –10% and 20% in Motorola which returned 5%, what was the portfolio’s rate of return?
* 14%
* 8%
* 8.45%
* 9.11%

A

8%
* The investment in IBM is 50% of the portfolio, so the return of 20% times the portfolio weight of 50% yields a contribution to the portfolio return of 10% (50% weight x 20% return).
* Calculate the same for Texaco (30% weight x -10% return = -3%), and
* the same for Motorola (20% weight x 5% return = 1%).
* Adding the three together generates the portfolio return
* (10% + -3% + 1% = 8%).

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14
Q

Portfolio diversification is most effective when the correlation coefficient is
* Greater than zero
* Positive
* Less than one
* Less than zero

A

Less than zero
* When the correlation coefficient is greater than zero, it indicates the securities in the portfolio are moving in tandem.
* Whereas, when the correlation coefficient is zero, the movement of one security in comparison to the other in the portfolio is not predictable.
* When the correlation coefficient is less than zero, the movement of one security as against the other is exactly opposite, indicating the most diversified situation.

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15
Q

Section 2 – Performance Measures

An investor who has been paying someone to actively manage his or her portfolio has every right to insist on knowing what sort of performance was obtained. Such information can be used to alter the constraints placed on the manager, the investment objectives given to the manager, or the amount of money allocated to the manager. Perhaps even more important, by evaluating performance in specified ways, a client can forcefully communicate his or her interests to the investment manager and, in all likelihood, affect the way in which his or her portfolio is managed in the future. Portfolio performance evaluation and measures can be viewed as feedback and control mechanisms that can make the investment management process more effective.

A

To ensure that you have a solid understanding of performance measures, the following topics will be covered in this lesson:
* Investment policy statements
* Probability analysis
* Measures of return
* Risk adjusted performance measures
* Appropriate benchmarks

Upon completion of this lesson, you should be able to:
* Identify investment policies,
* List methods of probability analysis used in performance evaluation,
* Explain the various methods of measuring returns,
* Calculate the rate adjusted basis for evaluating performance, and
* Compare portfolios referred to as benchmark portfolios.

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16
Q

PRACTITIONER ADVICE

PRACTITIONER ADVICE
An investment policy is an important tool drawn up at the end of a lengthy discovery interview. However, many of the statements made are based on historic behavior. A good financial planner will probe for a true understanding of risk, especially in a bull market when people are less focused on risk and more focused on getting big returns like everyone else. The planner should de-emphasize current conditions and focus on getting to the client’s time horizon

A
17
Q

PRACTITIONER ADVICE

PRACTITIONER ADVICE
Monte Carlo simulations are performed on computer software to determine expected portfolio returns and the likelihood of receiving those returns. However, statistics do not factor in what people may be driven to do by their emotions at various market environment conditions. Therefore, it is important to position the simulation results as what they are: statistical trials.

A
18
Q

What are the 4 common ways to calculate Measures of Return?

A
  • Holding Period. ((Terminal Value - Initial Value) + Cashflows) / Initial Value. This method’s major weakness is it fails to take the time value of money into account.
  • Dollar-weighted Return (Internal Rate of Return). Breaks up the holding period so that the market value of the account after a change will be compounded by the amount of time it was earning the interest. It is the best way to measure an individual investor’s results.
  • Time-weighted Return. Calculates the return for the amount prior to a change caused by deposit or withdrawal. The individual returns are added together. It is more accurate than annualized returns.
  • Annualized Returns. Either add the returns of the quarters together, or add 1 to each quarterly return, then multiply the four figures, and finally subtract 1 from the resulting product. This could be misleading because it does not consider how long each dollar was in the investment.
19
Q

What are the 3 common risk-adjusted performance measures?

A

CAPM-based measures of portfolio performance are:
* Sharpe ratio
* Treynor ratio
* Jensen’s ratio

Each one of these measures provides an estimate of a portfolio’s risk-adjusted performance, thereby allowing the client to see how the portfolio performed relative to other portfolios and relative to the market.

20
Q

Describe Sharpe Ratio

A

Ranking portfolios’ returns averaged over several years is oversimplified because such rankings ignore risk. Thus, what is needed is an index of portfolio performance, which is determined by both the return and the risk.

William F. Sharpe devised the reward-to-variability index of portfolio performance, denoted SHARPEp. This defines a single parameter portfolio performance index that is calculated from both the risk and return statistics.

21
Q

PRACTITIONER ADVICE

PRACTITIONER ADVICE
* Remember that the coefficient of determination (R-squared) will show the relevancy of the benchmark.
* For example, a certain stock may move with a broad market index. However, if an industry factor causes the stock to drop, the rest of the market may move forward without it.
* The R-squared should be greater than 0.7 to use beta or any of the beta formulas (alpha, CAPM, Treynor).
* When an R-squared is under 0.7, use the standard deviation statistic and formulas.

A
22
Q

LIST COMMON MARKET INDEXES USED AS BENCHMARKS FOR PORTFOLIOS OF US-BASED COMPANIES

A
  • Dow Jones Industry Average (DJIA) 30 of the largest U.S.-based companies
  • Standard & Poor’s 500 (S&P 500) 500 U.S.-based companies. Widely accepted as the standard index to benchmark against for large cap U.S. stocks. According to the S&P, 97% of money managers and pension funds are indexed against the S&P 500.
  • Wilshire 5000 Contains of 6,500 U.S.-based companies. Considered the broadest index for U.S. Stocks.
  • Russell 2000 Commonly used as a benchmark for small company portfolios. The capitalization ranges from approximately $1.3 billion to $128 million.
  • NASDAQ Typically, a benchmark for technology companies and mid-size companies.
23
Q

Section 2 – Performance Measures Summary

In this lesson, we learned about the different ways of evaluating the performance of portfolios. Before investing in a portfolio, it is helpful to set the parameters around how it will be managed and what will be held in it. As the securities are being picked, probability analysis can determine an expected return and risk for the portfolio. After the investment period, performance can be measured by performing period-return and risk-adjusted return calculations. The results can be compared to the expected forecast when the portfolio was created and to benchmark indexes over the same period of time.

In this lesson, we have covered the following:

A
  • Investment policy statements determine the investment objectives and investable wealth of the investor
  • Measures of return include the comparison of dollar-weighted and time-weighted measures.
  • Appropriate benchmarks help by comparing the actual portfolio to the alternative portfolios that could have been chosen for investment.
  • Risk-adjusted performance measures can be used to evaluate the risk and appropriate returns from investments.
  • Probability analysis is used to forecast the expected return of a portfolio. Before investing, it can be used to forecast how well a portfolio will perform. When looking back, it can be used to show how well the portfolio did in comparison to its estimated return and risk.
24
Q

Which one of the following methods measures the reward-to-volatility trade-off by dividing the average portfolio excess return over the systematic risk of the market?
* Sharpe’s measure
* Treynor’s measure
* Jensen’s measure
* Appraisal ratio

A

Treynor’s measure
* The beta coefficient from a characteristic line is an index of an investment’s nondiversifiable risk. Treynor suggested using a portfolio’s risk premium relative to its beta.
* This is known as the Treynor’s index of return-to-volatility portfolio performance.
* It measures the reward-to-volatility trade-off by dividing the average portfolio excess return over the beta of the asset’s returns.
* TREYNOR = (Excess return/Index of nondiversifiable risk) = (rp - RFR/Beta).

25
Q

In selecting benchmark portfolios for comparison, the client should be certain that they represent …
* The best possible portfolio construction available
* The best but not necessarily a feasible portfolio
* Alternative portfolios that could have been chosen instead of the one chosen
* Portfolios of varying degrees of risk

A

Alternative portfolios that could have been chosen instead of the one chosen
* Comparing the returns obtained by the investment manager with appropriate alternative portfolios that could have been chosen for investment helps evaluate portfolio performance.
* In selecting the benchmark portfolio, the client should be certain that they are relevant, feasible, and known in advance, meaning that they should represent alternative portfolios that could have been chosen for investment instead of the portfolio being evaluated.

26
Q

Which measure includes methods that are used when deposits or withdrawals occur sometime between the beginning and end of the investment interval?
* Time-weighted returns
* The geometric mean
* The arithmetic mean
* Dollar-weighted returns

A

Dollar-weighted returns
* The dollar-weighted return (or internal rate of return) is the method that helps in situations when deposits or withdrawals occur sometime between the beginning and end of the period.

27
Q

Module Summary

Some financial planners manage portfolios for their clients. In creating a portfolio, it helps to understand how the mix of assets within the portfolio will affect its overall risk and return. It is also important to know how to determine the goals and objectives of the portfolio and measure how well it performed.

The key concepts to remember are:

A
  • Modern Portfolio Theory asserts that, in general, investors are risk-averse and they care about two outcomes of a portfolio: return and risk. Portfolio returns are determined by the combination of weighted returns of the securities within the portfolio. Portfolio risk is determined by the combination of standard deviation, beta, covariance and correlation of the securities within the portfolio.
  • Performance measures are important in evaluating the performance of a portfolio manager and the securities within a portfolio. Risk-adjusted measures such as the Sharpe Ratio, the Treynor Ratio, the Information Ratio, and the Jensen alpha measurement are used to evaluate the performance of a portfolio. Benchmarks for a portfolio should also be set so that the portfolio’s performance can be matched with the performance of a relevant index.
28
Q

Exam 9. Portfolio Management and Measurements

Exam 9. Portfolio Management and Measurements

A
29
Q

Understanding how risk-averse investors construct portfolios to optimize expected returns against market risk is best described as __ ____??____ __.
* Modern Portfolio Theory
* Greater Fool Theory
* Random Walk Theory
* Behavioral Finance

A

Modern Portfolio Theory
* Understanding how risk-averse investors construct portfolios to optimize expected returns against market risk is best described as Modern Portfolio Theory (MPT).

30
Q

Consider the following information:
Security Name
Weight in Portfolio
Expected Return
Adam Stock
33%
15%
Brendan Stock
22%
11%
Jerry Stock
25%
6%
Mike Stock
20%
27%
What is the expected return of this portfolio of stocks?
* 17.21%
* 14.75%
* 11.46%
* 14.27%

A

14.27%

The expected return is solved by adding the proportionate weighting of each component’s expected contribution:
* Adam Stock. 33% x 15% = 0.0495
* Brendan Stock. 22% x 11% = 0.0242
* Jerry Stock. 25% x 6% = 0.015
* Mike Stock. 20% x 27% = 0.054

31
Q

The assumption that investors, given the same level of risk, will always choose the portfolio with the greatest return is known as __ ____??____ __.
* non-correlation
* risk-tolerant
* non-satiation
* risk-averse

A

non-satiation
* The assumption that investors, given the same level of risk, will always choose the portfolio with the greatest return is known as non-satiation.

32
Q

The statistical measure of co-movement that is standardized on a scale of -1.0 to 1.0 is known as __ ____??____ __.
* Covariance
* the Comparative Value
* the Correlation Coefficient
* the Coefficient of Variation

A

the Correlation Coefficient
* Only the correlation coefficient has a standardized scale.

33
Q

If a portfolio manager is looking to add diversifying securities into their portfolio, which of the following securities would be best to add?
* Non-correlated securities
* Proportionately correlated securities
* Positively correlated securities
* Negatively correlated securities

A

Negatively correlated securities
* Negatively correlated securities will have the most diversifying benefit.

34
Q

Security A
Expected Return 15%
Standard Deviation 11%

Security B
Expected Return 7%
Standard Deviation 12%

Security C
Expected Return 23%
Standard Deviation 22%
Which of the securities is most efficient?
* Security C
* Not possible to determine
* Security A
* Security B

A

Security A
* The question is asking about the coefficient of variation or standard deviation divided by the expected return.

A = 0.11 ÷ 0.15 = 0.733
B = 0.12 ÷ 0.07 = 1.71
C = 0.22 ÷ 0.23 = 0.956
Security A has the most efficient return.

35
Q

Consider the following information:
Security A
Expected Return 21%
Standard Deviation 17%
Weight in Portfolio 45%
Security B
Expected Return 27%
Standard Deviation 16%
Weight in Portfolio 55%
Correlation Coefficient = 0.32
What is the weighted standard deviation of this two-asset portfolio?
* 17.13%
* 15.61%
* 42.53%
* 19.43%

A

17.13%
* σp=((0.45×0.27)2 + (0.55 × 0.16)2 + 2(0.45)(0.55)(0.01382))‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾
* ‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾√ =σp= (0.01476 + 0.00774 + 0.00684)‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾
* ‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾√=σp= 0.02934‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾√=σp=0.1713=17.13%

36
Q

Consider the following information:
Security A
Expected Return 11%
Standard Deviation 14%
Weight in Portfolio 41%
Security B
Expected Return 17%
Standard Deviation 21%
Weight in Portfolio 59%
Correlation Coefficient = 0.61
What is the covariance of securities A & B?
* 0.011407
* 0.017934
* 0.147559
* 0.019873

A

0.017934
* COVij = ρijσiσjCOVij
* = 0.61 × 0.14 × 0.21
* COVij = 0.017934

37
Q

When two securities are expected move in the same direction at the same time to the same degree they are best described as __ ____??____ __.
* perfectly positively correlated
* diversified
* perfectly negatively correlated
* perfectly non-correlated

A

perfectly positively correlated
* These securities would have a correlation coefficient of 1.0 and be considered perfectly positively correlated.

38
Q

Consider the following information:
Security A
Expected Return 15%
Standard Deviation 23%
Weight in Portfolio 67%
Security B
Expected Return 7%
Standard Deviation 12%
Weight in Portfolio 33%
Correlation Coefficient = 0.72
What is the weighted standard deviation of this two-asset portfolio?
* 17.50%
* 19.43%
* 34.37%
* 18.47%

A

18.47%
σp=((0.67×0.23)2+(0.33×0.12)2+2(0.67)(0.33)(0.01987))√=
σp=(0.02375+0.00157+0.00879)‾‾
‾‾‾√=
σp=0.03411‾‾‾‾‾‾‾‾√
=σp=0.1847=18.47%