The Main Investment Theories Flashcards
Modern portfolio theory
Portfolio construction to maximise returns and minimise risks (assumes investors are risk averse)
Professor Harry Markowitz: portfolio diversification can reduce risk and increase returns
Standard Deviation: how widely investment returns vary around its average or expected return
useful tool in identifying range of likely returns. (68% of the time returns within 1 standard deviation, 95% of the time returns are within 2 standard deviations)
Efficient Frontier
Relationship between return from portfolio and risk of portfolio
Set of portfolios to show maximum rate of return for given levels of risk
Limitations: assumes standard deviation is best measure of risk and assets have normal distribution of returns (investor’s portfolio is dependent on their risk profile)
CAPM assumptions / limitations
Assumptions
Information is free and available
Investors are risk averse/rational
No individual can affect market price
Identical holding period
No taxes, transaction costs
Limitations
Totally risk-free return required
True market portfolio required
Beta suitability (needs to be stable and predictable)
Arbitrage Pricing Theory
security returns can be predicted using relationship between security and common risk factors - able to correctly price a security
4 factors influencing security if returns
Unanticipated inflation
Changes in expected level of industrial production
Changes in default risk premium on bonds
Unanticipated changes in return of long-term government bonds over treasury bills
Efficient Market Hypothesis
Market prices always correct as fully reflect all available information
So not possible to outperform markets consistently
Bulk of evidence supports EMH but behavioral economists now question validity
EMH weak form, semi strong and strong form
Weak form
Technical analysis (historical
data) cannot predict future
prices
Semi-strong form
Fundamental and technical
analysis can identify if stock
overvalued
Strong form
Prices reflect all informationi
Prospect theory/Loss aversion
people do not always behave rationally; they are more
distressed about a prospective loss than being happy about gains