Exam 8: Portfolio Theory and the Capital Asset Pricing Model

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Almost all tests of the CAPM have confirmed that it explains stock returns, especially for high-beta stocks.

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Suppose you borrow at the risk-free rate an amount equal to your initial wealth and invest in a portfolio with an expected return of 20 percent and a standard deviation of returns of 16 percent. The risk-free asset has an interest rate of 4 percent. Calculate the standard deviation of the resulting portfolio.

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Assume the following data for a stock: Beta = 0.5; risk-free rate = 4 percent; market rate of return = 12 percent; and expected rate of return on the stock = 10 percent. Then the stock is

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Assume the following data for a stock: Risk-free rate = 5 percent; beta (market)= 1.4; beta (size)= 0.4; beta (book-to-market)= −1.1; market risk premium = 7 percent; size risk premium = 3.7 percent; and book-to-market risk premium = 5.2 percent. Calculate the expected return on the stock using the Fama-French three-factor model.

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Suppose you invest equal amounts in a portfolio with an expected return of 16 percent and a standard deviation of returns of 18 percent and a risk-free asset with an interest rate of 4 percent. Calculate the standard deviation of the returns on the resulting portfolio.

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Florida Company (FC)and Minnesota Company (MC)are both service companies. Their stock returns for the past three years were as follows: FC: −5%, 15 percent, 20 percent; MC: 8 percent, 8 percent, 20 percent. Calculate the covariance between the returns of FC and MC. (Ignore the correction for the loss of a degree of freedom set out in the text.)

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Does it make sense that returns on holding a U.S. Treasury bill are always lower than the returns on the S&P 500 index?

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A stock return's beta measures

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All else equal, investors prefer to choose from portfolios having higher Sharpe ratios.

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Normal and lognormal distributions are completely specified by their

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Who first developed portfolio theory?

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Investments B and C both have the same standard deviation of 20 percent and have the same correlation to the market portfolio. If the expected return on B is 15 percent and that of C is 18 percent, then the investors would

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Florida Company (FC)and Minnesota Company (MC)are both service companies. Their stock returns for the past three years were as follows: FC: −5 percent, 15 percent, 20 percent; MC: 8 percent, 8 percent, 20 percent. Calculate the variances of returns for FC and MC. (Ignore the correction for the loss of a degree of freedom set out in the text.)

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Florida Company (FC)and Minnesota Company (MC)are both service companies. Their stock returns for the past three years were as follows: FC: −5 percent, 15 percent, 20 percent; MC: 8 percent, 8 percent, 20 percent. What is the standard deviation of a portfolio with 50 percent of the funds invested in FC and 50 percent in MC? (Ignore the correction for the loss of a degree of freedom set out in the text.)

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Florida Company (FC)and Minnesota Company (MC)are both service companies. Their stock returns for the past three years were as follows: FC: -5 percent, 15 percent, 20 percent; MC: 8 percent, 8 percent, 20 percent. If FC and MC are combined into a portfolio with 50 percent of the funds invested in each stock, calculate the expected return on the portfolio.

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The arbitrage pricing theory (APT)implies that the market portfolio is efficient.

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An efficient portfolio

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In addition to common stocks, the addition of real estate (as an investment alternative)will likely expand the efficient frontier to a better risk-return trade-off.

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Underpriced stocks will plot below the security market line.

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Most investors dislike uncertainty.

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