Title: Chapter 12
1Chapter 12 Some Lessons from Capital Market
History SELECTED PROBLEMS
2CRTC 12 1Question
- Given that Nortel was up by more than 300 percent
in the 12 months ending in July 2000, why didnt
all investors hold Nortel?
Agenda
3CRTC 12 1Answer
- Given that Nortel was up by more than 300 percent
in the 12 months ending in July 2000, why didnt
all investors hold Nortel? - They all wish they had! Since they didnt, it
must have been the case that the stellar
performance was not foreseeable, at least not by
most.
Agenda
4CRTC 12 3Question
- We have seen that, over long periods of time,
stock investments have tended to substantially
outperform bond investments. - However, it is not at all uncommon to observe
investors with long horizons holding entirely
bonds. - Are such investors irrational?
Learning Goals
5CRTC 12 3Answer
- We have seen that, over long periods of time,
stock investments have tended to substantially
outperform bond investments. - However, it is not at all uncommon to observe
investors with long horizons holding entirely
bonds. - Are such investors irrational?
- No, stocks are riskier. Some investors are highly
risk averse, and the extra possible return
doesnt attract them relative to the extra risk. - Additionally, bonds can play a very important
role in overall portfolio diversification because
the returns on bonds are very weakly correlated
with the returns on stocks. -
Learning Goals
6CRTC 12 4Question
- Explain why a characteristic of an efficient
market is that investments in that market have
zero NPVs.
Terms
7CRTC 12 4Answer
- Explain why a characteristic of an efficient
market is that investments in that market have
zero NPVs. - On average, the only return that is earned is the
required returninvestors buy assets with returns
in excess of the required return (positive NPV),
bidding up the price and thus causing the return
to fall to the required return (zero NPV)
investors sell assets with returns less than the
required return (negative NPV), driving the price
lower and thus the causing the return to rise to
the required return (zero NPV).
Terms
8CRTC 12 6Question
- If a market is semistrong form efficient, is it
also weak form efficient? Explain.
Rewards
9CRTC 12 6Answer
- If a market is semistrong form efficient, is it
also weak form efficient? Explain. - Yes, historical information is also public
information weak form efficiency is a subset of
semi-strong form efficiency.
Rewards
10CRTC 12 7Question
- What are the implications of the efficient
markets hypothesis for investors who buy and sell
stocks in an attempt to beat the market?
Wealth
11CRTC 12 7Answer
- What are the implications of the efficient
markets hypothesis for investors who buy and sell
stocks in an attempt to beat the market? - Ignoring trading costs, on average, such
investors merely earn what the market offers the
trades all have zero NPV. If trading costs exist,
then these investors lose by the amount of the
costs.
Wealth
12CRTC 12 8Question
- Critically evaluate the following statement
- Playing the stock market is like gambling. Such
speculative investing has no social value, other
than the pleasure people get from this form of
gambling.
What is it?
13CRTC 12 8Answer
- Critically evaluate the following statement
- Playing the stock market is like gambling. Such
speculative investing has no social value, other
than the pleasure people get from this form of
gambling. -
- Unlike gambling, the stock market is a positive
sum game everybody can win. Also, speculators
provide liquidity to markets and thus help to
promote efficiency. - Efficient secondary markets make it possible for
firms to raise capital in the primary markets.
What is it?
14CRTC 12 9Question
- There are several celebrated investors and
stockpickers frequently mentioned in the
financial press who have recorded huge returns on
their investments over the past two decades. - Is the success of these particular investors an
invalidation of the EMH? Explain.
Process
15CRTC 12 9Question
Warren Buffet Berkshire Hathaway - 2006 report
- There are several celebrated investors and
stockpickers frequently mentioned in the
financial press who have recorded huge returns on
their investments over the past two decades. - Is the success of these particular investors an
invalidation of the EMH? Explain. - The EMH only says, within the bounds of
increasingly strong assumptions about the
information processing of investors, that assets
are fairly priced. An implication of this is
that, on average, the typical market participant
cannot earn excessive profits from a particular
trading strategy. However, that does not mean
that a few particular investors cannot outperform
the market over a particular investment horizon.
Certain investors who do well for a period of
time get a lot of attention from the financial
press, but the scores of investors who do not do
well over the same period of time generally get
considerably less attention from the financial
press.
Process
16Questions and Problems 12 1Question
- Suppose a stock had an initial price of 64 per
share, paid a dividend of 1.75 per share during
the year, and had an ending share price of 72. - Compute the percentage total return.
- The return of any asset is the increase in price,
plus any dividends or cash flows, all divided by
the initial price. The return of this stock is - R (72 64) 1.75 / 64 .1523 or 15.23
17Questions and Problems 12 1Answer
- Suppose a stock had an initial price of 64 per
share, paid a dividend of 1.75 per share during
the year, and had an ending share price of 72. - Compute the percentage total return.
- The return of any asset is the increase in price,
plus any dividends or cash flows, all divided by
the initial price. The return of this stock is
18Questions and Problems 12 2Question
- In Problem 1, what was the dividend yield? The
capital gains yield?
19Questions and Problems 12 2Answer
- In Problem 1, what was the dividend yield? The
capital gains yield?
20Questions and Problems 12 4 (a)Question
- What is the arithmetic return for the SP/TSX
Composite Index from 1996 to 2005?
21Questions and Problems 12 4 (a)Answer
- What is the arithmetic return for the SP/TSX
Composite Index from 1996 to 2005?
22Questions and Problems 12 4 (b)Question
- What is the arithmetic return for the Scotia
Capital Marketts long bonds from 1996 to 2005?
23Questions and Problems 12 4 (b)Answer
- What is the arithmetic return for the Scotia
Capital Marketts long bonds from 1996 to 2005?
24Questions and Problems 12 5 (a)Question
- What is the geometric return for the SP/TSX
Composite Index from 1996 to 2005?
25Questions and Problems 12 5 (a)Answer
- What is the geometric return for the SP/TSX
Composite Index from 1996 to 2005?
26Questions and Problems 12 5 (b)Answer
- What is the geometric return for the Scotia
Markets Long Bonds from 1996 to 2005?
27Questions and Problems 12 6Question
- Suppose you bought a 9 percent coupon bond one
year ago for 1,050. The bond sells for 1,080
today. - Assuming a 1,000 face value, what was your total
dollar return on this investment over the past
year? - What was your total nominal rate of return on
this investment over the past year? - If the inflation last year was 4 percent, what
was your total real return on this investment?
28Questions and Problems 12 6Answer
- Suppose you bought a 9 percent coupon bond one
year ago for 1,050. The bond sells for 1,080
today. - a. Assuming a 1,000 face value, what was your
total dollar return on this investment over the
past year? - Total dollar return 1,080 - 1,050 90
120. - b. What was your total nominal rate of return on
this investment over the past year? - R (1,080 - 1,050) 90 / 1,050 .1143
- 11.43
- c. If the inflation last year was 4 percent, what
was your total real return on this investment? - Using the Fisher equation, the real return was
- (1 R) (1 r)(1 h)
- R (1.1143 / 1.04) 1 .0714 7.14
29Questions and Problems 12 9Question
- Using the following returns, calculate the
arithmetic average returns, the variances, and
the standard deviations for X and Y.
30Questions and Problems 12 9Answer
31Questions and Problems 12 10Question
- Refer to Table 12.1 in the text and look at the
period from 1970 through 1975. - Calculate the arithmetic average returns for
large-company stocks and T-bills over this time
period. - Calculate the standard deviation of the returns
for large-company stocks and T-bills over this
time period. - Calculate the observed risk premium in each year
for the large-company stocks versus the T-bills.
What was the average risk premium over this
period? What was the standard deviation of the
risk premium over this period? - Is it possible for the risk premium to be
negative before an investment is undertaken? Can
the risk premium be negative after-the-fact?
Explain.
32Questions and Problems 12 10Answer
33Questions and Problems 12 10Answer
d. Before the fact, for most assets the risk
premium will be positive investors demand
compensation over and above the risk-free return
to invest their money in the risky asset. After
the fact, the observed risk premium can be
negative if the assets nominal return is
unexpectedly low, the risk-free return is
unexpectedly high, or if some combination of
these two events occurs.
34Questions and Problems 12 15Question
You bought one of Great White Shark Repellant
Co.s 8 percent coupon bonds one year ago for
980. These bonds make annual payments and
mature six years from now. Suppose you decide to
sell your bonds today, when the required return
on the bonds is 9 percent. If the inflation
rate was 4.2 percent over the past year, what was
your total real return on investment?
35Questions and Problems 12 15Answer
To find the real return, we first need to find
the nominal return, which means we need the
current price of the bond. Going back to the
chapter on pricing bonds, we find the current
price is P1 80(PVIFA9,6) 1,000(PVIF9,6)
955.14 So the nominal return is R
(955.14 980) 80/980 .0563 or
5.63 And, using the Fisher equation, we find
the real return is 1 R (1 r)(1 h) r
(1.0563/1.042) 1 .0137 or 1.37
36Questions and Problems 12 18Problem
A stock has had the following year-end prices and
dividends What are the arithmetic and
geometric average returns for the stock?
37Questions and Problems 12 18Answer
First we will calculate the Holding Period
Returns for each year. What are the
arithmetic and geometric average returns for the
stock?
38Questions and Problems 12 18Answer
Now we can find both the arithmetic and the
geometric mean. What are the
arithmetic and geometric average returns for the
stock?
39Questions and Problems 12 19Question Using
Return Distributions
Suppose the returns on long-term government bonds
are normally distributed. Based on the
historical record, what is the approximate
probability that your return on these bonds will
be less than 3.6 percent in any given
year? What range of returns would you expect to
see 95 percent of the time? What range of
returns would you expect to see 99 percent of the
time?
40Questions and Problems 12 19Answer Using
Return Distributions
Suppose the returns on long-term government bonds
are normally distributed. Based on the
historical record, what is the approximate
probability that your return on these bonds will
be less than 3.6 percent in any given
year? Therefore the probability that the
bonds returns will be less than -3.6 percent in
any given year (based on the historical data
available) is 11.1. 1.00 - .111 .889
88.9 of the time, bond returns will be greater
than -3.6.
41Questions and Problems 12 19Answer Using
Return Distributions
Suppose the returns on long-term government bonds
are normally distributed. What range of
returns would you expect to see 95 percent of the
time?
42Questions and Problems 12 19Answer Using
Return Distributions
Suppose the returns on long-term government bonds
are normally distributed. What range of
returns would you expect to see 99 percent of the
time?
43(No Transcript)
44THE END!