Chapter 5: Portfolio Theory Flashcards

1
Q

Modern portfolio theory

A

Specifies a method for an investor to construct a portfolio that gives the maximum return for a specified risk, or the minimum risk for a specified return.

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2
Q

Actuarial risk

A

Risk that the investor fails to meet his or her liabilities.

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3
Q

7 Assumptions of Mean-variance Portfolio Theory

A
  • All expected returns, variances and covariances of pairs of assets are known
  • Investors make their decisions purely on the basis of expected return and variance
  • Investors are non-satiated
  • Investors are risk-averse
  • fixed single-step time period
  • no taxes or transaction costs
  • Assets may be held in any amounts
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4
Q

2 Assumptions of Efficient portfolio theory

A
  • Investors are never staited

- Investors dislike risk

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5
Q

Inefficient portfolio

A

If the investor can find another portfolio with the same/higher expected return and lower variance, or the same/lower variance and higher expected return.

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6
Q

Efficient portfolio

A

If the investor cannot find a portfolio with a higher expected return and the same/lower variance or a lower variance and the same/higher expected return.

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7
Q

Opportunity set

A

The set of points in E-V space that are attainable by the investor based on the available combinations of securities.

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8
Q

Indifference curves

A

join points of equal expected utility in E-V space.

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9
Q

Optimal portfolio

A

The portfolio that maximises the investor’s expected utility.

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10
Q

7 Key factors that might influence the investment decision

A
  • Expected return & variance
  • Higher moments of the distribution of returns such as skewness and kurtosis
  • Suitability of the asset for an investor’s liabilities
  • taxes & investment expenses
  • Marketability of the asset
  • restrictions imposed by legislation
  • restrictions imposed by the fund’s trustees
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11
Q

State 2 conditions that need to be met in order for mean-variance portfolio theory to be consistent with utility theory.

A
  • Investors have quadratic utility functions

- Investment returns are normally distributed (or elliptically symmetrically distributed)

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12
Q

Explain 2 Benefits of diversification

A
  • Return on the portfolio is less exposed to the specific risks of any one component.
  • the correlation components become less important, therefore variance of return is minimised.
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13
Q

Outline the limitations of CAPM

A
  • Empirical studies don’t support it
  • It does not account for taxes, inflation, or situations in which no riskless asset exists
  • It does not consider multiple time periods or optimisation of consumption over time.
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14
Q

Key defining properties of brownian motion

A
  • Independent increments
  • Stationary increments
  • Gaussian increments
  • Continuous sample paths
  • B0 = 0
  • Cov(Bs, Bt) = min(s, t)
  • {Bt, t>= 0} is a Markov process
  • {Bt, t>= 0} is a Martingale
  • {Bt, t>= 0} returns infinitely often to 0 (or indeed to any other level)
  • Scaling property
  • Time inversion property
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