Lecture 1 Flashcards

1
Q

Geometric vs arithmetic average

A

Geometric average always less than or equal to arithmetic average

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2
Q

The Risk Premium For Arithmetic Returns

A

Average rate of return for equity minus risk free interest rate

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3
Q

When decisions are being taken on a forward-looking basis

A

The arithmetic mean (rA) is the appropriate measure

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4
Q

Why arithmetic mean is better for forward-looking

A
  • Represents the mean of all the returns that may possibly occur over the investment holding period
  • Best estimator of expected (short-term) future return
  • The best gauge of the expected risk premium - Expected return above risk free interest rate
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5
Q

When to use geometric average

A

• When past performance is being considered

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6
Q

How to Find Relation Between Risk and Return?

A
  • Have a look at the historical records – returns – for assets with different risks
  • Caveat
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7
Q

Investors demand compensation for

A
  1. Abstaining from consuming today and waiting until tomorrow
  2. Taking on risk – measured by the risk premium
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8
Q

Equity Risk premium

A

Difference between the return on equities and the return on a risk-free asset, typically treasury bills (and government bonds)

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9
Q

The risk premium matters because it is central to

A
  • Projecting future investment returns
  • Calculating a company’s cost of equity capital
  • Valuing companies and shares
  • Appraising investment projects
  • Determining fair rates of return for regulated utilities
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