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The Capital Asset Pricing: Model (CAPM)
The Capital Asset Pricing: Model (CAPM)
Model (CAPM)
Lecture Agenda
• Learning Objectives
• Important Terms
• The New Efficient Frontier
• The Capital Asset Pricing Model
• The CAPM and Market Risk
• Alternative Asset Pricing Models
• Summary and Conclusions
– Concept Review Questions
– Appendix 1 – Calculating the Ex Ante Beta
– Appendix 2 – Calculating the Ex Post Beta
1
Learning Objectives
9-3
Important Chapter Terms
• Arbitrage pricing theory (APT) • Market risk premium
• Capital Asset Pricing Model • New (or super) efficient
frontier
(CAPM) • No-arbitrage principle
• Capital market line (CML) • Required rate of return
• Characteristic line • Risk premium
• Fama-French (FF) model • Security market line (SML)
• Separation theorum
• Insurance premium
• Sharpe ratio
• Market portfolio • Short position
• Market price of risk • Tangent portfolio
9-4
Achievable Portfolio Combinations
The Two-Asset Case
9-5
Example of Portfolio Combinations and
Correlation
You repeat this
procedure Expected Standard Correlation
down until you Asset Return Deviation Coefficient
have determine
A 8.0% 8.7% -0.379
the portfolio
B 10.0% 22.7%
characteristics
The first
for all
The 100
second Portfolio Components Portfolio Characteristics
combination
portfolios.
portfolio Expected Standard
simply99%
assumes Weight of A Weight of B Return Deviation
inNext plot1%
assumes
A and the
in 100% 0% 8.00% 8.7%
returns
B. Notice onthe
a 99% 1% 8.02% 8.5%
you
graph
invest
(see in
increase the 98% 2% 8.04% 8.4%
solely
next
return and inthe
slide) 97% 3% 8.06% 8.2%
Asset Ain
decrease 96% 4% 8.08% 8.1%
portfolio risk! 95% 5% 8.10% 7.9%
94% 6% 8.12% 7.8%
93% 7% 8.14% 7.7%
92% 8% 8.16% 7.5%
91% 9% 8.18% 7.4%
90% 10% 8.20% 7.3%
89% 11% 8.22% 7.2%
9-6
Attainable Portfolio Combinations for a
Two Asset Portfolio
Example of
Portfolio 12.00%
Combinations Expected Return of the
10.00%
and
Correlation 8.00%
Portfolio
6.00%
4.00%
2.00%
0.00%
0.0% 5.0% 10.0% 15.0% 20.0% 25.0%
Standard Deviation of Returns
9-7
Two Asset Efficient Frontier
9-8
Efficient Frontier
The Two-Asset Portfolio Combinations
8 - 10 FIGURE
A is not attainable
B,E lie on the
efficient frontier and
are attainable
A B E is the minimum
Expected Return %
variance portfolio
C (lowest risk
combination)
C, D are
attainable but are
E dominated by
D superior portfolios
that line on the line
above E
Standard Deviation (%)
9-9
Achievable Set of Portfolio Combinations
Getting to the ‘n’ Asset Case
9 - 10
The Achievable Set of Portfolio
Combinations
9 - 11
Achievable Portfolio Combinations
The First Ten Combinations Created
ERp
10 Achievable
Risky Portfolio
Combinations
9 - 12
The Achievable Set of Portfolio
Combinations
9 - 13
Achievable Portfolio Combinations
Thirty Combinations Naively Created
ERp
30 Risky Portfolio
Combinations
9 - 14
Achievable Set of Portfolio Combinations
All Securities – Many Hundreds of Different Combinations
9 - 15
Achievable Portfolio Combinations
More Possible Combinations Created
The highlighted
portfolios are
ERp ‘efficient’ in that
they offer the
highest rate of
E is the return for a given
minimum level of risk.
variance Rationale investors
portfolio Achievable Set of will choose only
Risky Portfolio from this efficient
Combinations set.
9 - 16
Achievable Portfolio Combinations
Efficient Frontier (Set)
Efficient
ERp frontier is the
set of
achievable
portfolio
combinations
Achievable Set of that offer the
Risky Portfolio
Combinations
highest rate
of return for a
given level of
E
risk.
9 - 17
The New Efficient Frontier
Efficient Portfolios
9 - 1 FIGURE
Figure 9 – 1
illustrates
Efficient Frontier three
ER
achievable
portfolio
combinations
B
that are
A ‘efficient’ (no
other
achievable
MVP portfolio that
offers the
same risk,
Risk offers a higher
return.)
9 - 18
Underlying Assumption
Investors are Rational and Risk-Averse
9 - 19
Risk-free Investing
9 - 20
The New Efficient Frontier
Risk-Free Investing
p
ER
RFw(ER
-RF)
[9-1] A
The possible combinations of A and RF are found graphed on the following slide.
9 - 21
The New Efficient Frontier
Attainable Portfolios Using RF and A
9 - 2 FIGURE
This means
you can 9 – 2
Equation
Rearranging 9
ER achieve
illustratesany
-2 where w=σ
portfolio
what you can
p / σA and
combination
see…portfolio
substituting in
[9-2] pA
E(R )-w
RF along
risk the blue
increases
[9-3] ERRF
A
Equation 1 we
P
P
coloured
in line
A A getdirect
an
simply by to
proportion
equation for a
changing
the amount the
RF straight line
relative
invested weight
with a in the
of RFasset.
risky and A in
constant
the two asset
slope.
portfolio.
Risk
9 - 22
The New Efficient Frontier
Attainable Portfolios using the RF and A, and RF and T
9 - 3 FIGURE
Which risky
portfolio
ER would a
rational risk-
T
averse
investor
A choose in the
presence of a
RF
RF investment?
Portfolio A?
Tangent
Risk Portfolio T?
9 - 23
The New Efficient Frontier
Efficient Portfolios using the Tangent Portfolio T
9 - 3 FIGURE
Clearly RF with
T (the tangent
portfolio) offers
ER a series of
portfolio
combinations
T
that dominate
A those produced
by RF and A.
Further, they
RF
dominate all but
one portfolio on
the efficient
frontier!
Risk
9 - 24
The New Efficient Frontier
Lending Portfolios
9 - 3 FIGURE
Portfolios
between RF
and T are
Lending Portfolios ‘lending’
ER
portfolios,
because they
T
are achieved by
A investing in the
Tangent
Portfolio and
RF lending funds to
the government
(purchasing a T-
bill, the RF).
Risk
9 - 25
The New Efficient Frontier
Borrowing Portfolios
9 - 3 FIGURE
The line can be
extended to risk
levels beyond
Lending Portfolios Borrowing Portfolios ‘T’ by
ER
borrowing at RF
and investing it
T
in T. This is a
A levered
investment that
increases both
RF risk and
expected return
of the portfolio.
Risk
9 - 26
The New Efficient Frontier
The New (Super) Efficient Frontier
9 - 28
The New Efficient Frontier
The Capital Market Line
σρ
9 - 29
The Capital Asset Pricing Model
What is it?
9 - 30
The Capital Asset Pricing Model
How is it Used?
– Uses include:
• Determining the cost of equity capital.
• The relevant risk in the dividend discount model to estimate a stock’s intrinsic
(inherent economic worth) value. (As illustrated below)
COV D
0
i i,M
P 1 Is the stock
2 i
k
RF
(ERRF
)
σM
kc g
M i
fairly priced?
9 - 31
The Capital Asset Pricing Model
Assumptions
9 - 32
Market Portfolio and Capital Market Line
9 - 33
The Capital Market Line
9 - 5 FIGURE
ER
CML
σM
9 - 34
The Capital Asset Pricing Model
The Market Portfolio and the Capital Market Line (CML)
ER-RF
[9-4] Slope
ofthe
CML M
M
ER
M - RF
[9-5] E
(RP) RF
P
σM
– Where:
• ERM = expected return on the market portfolio M
• σM = the standard deviation of returns on the market portfolio
• σP = the standard deviation of returns on the efficient portfolio being
considered 9 - 36
The Capital Market Line
Using the CML – Expected versus Required Returns
9 - 37
The Capital Asset Pricing Model
Expected and Required Rates of Return
9 - 6 FIGURE
B is an
C
A a portfolio that
overvalued
undervalued
offers
portfolio.
andExpected
expected
Required portfolio.
return equal
is less
Expected
tothan
the
Return on C
ER CML return
required
the required
is greater
return.
return.
Expected
than thepressure
Selling required
return on A A return.
will cause the price
to fall andfor
Demand the yield
C Portfolio
to rise until
A will
Required increase driving
expected equalsup
return on A
B the required
price, andreturn.
therefore the
Expected
Return on C
expected return will
RF
fall until expected
equals required
(market equilibrium
condition is
achieved.)
σρ
9 - 38
The Capital Asset Pricing Model
Risk-Adjusted Performance and the Sharpe Ratios
– William Sharpe identified a ratio that can be used to assess the risk-
adjusted performance of managed funds (such as mutual funds and
pension plans).
– It is called the Sharpe ratio:
ER-RF
[9-6] Sharpe P
ratio
P
9 - 40
Income Trust Estimated Values
Return σP Sharpe β
Source: Adapted from L. Kryzanowski, S. Lazrak, and I. Ratika, " The True
Cost of Income Trusts," Canadian Investment Review 19, no. 5 (Spring
2006), Table 3, p. 15.
9 - 41
Diversifiable and Non-Diversifiable Risk
9 - 42
The CAPM and Market Risk
Portfolio Risk and Diversification
9 - 7 FIGURE
Market or
systematic
Unique (Non-systematic) Risk
risk is risk
that cannot
be eliminated
from the
portfolio by
investing the
Market (Systematic) Risk
portfolio into
more and
different
securities.
Number of Securities
9 - 43
Relevant Risk
Drawing a Conclusion from Figure 9 - 7
9 - 44
The Beta Coefficient
What is the Beta Coefficient?
9 - 45
The Beta Coefficient
How Can We Estimate the Value of the Beta Coefficient?
(Figure 9 – 8 on the following slide illustrates the characteristic line used to estimate
the beta coefficient)
9 - 46
The CAPM and Market Risk
The Characteristic Line for Security A
9 - 8 FIGURE
4
The
Theslope
plottedof
-6
9 - 47
The Formula for the Beta Coefficient
COVi,M i
[9-7] i 2 i,M
σM M
9 - 48
The Beta Coefficient
How is the Beta Coefficient Interpreted?
• The beta of a security compares the volatility of its returns to the volatility of the market
returns:
9 - 49
Canadian BETAS
Selected
Source: Research Ins ight, Com pus tat North Am erican database, June 2006.
9 - 50
The Beta of a Portfolio
[9-8]
Pw
A
Aw
B
B
...
wnn
9 - 51
The CAPM and Market Risk
The Security Market Line (SML)
[9-9]
i
k
RF
(ER
M
RF
) i
– Where:
ki = the required return on security ‘i’
ERM – RF = market premium for risk
Βi = the beta coefficient for security ‘i’
9 - 52
(See Figure 9 - 9 on the following slide for the graphical representation)
The CAPM and Market Risk
The Security Market Line (SML)
9 - 9 FIGURE
ER ki RF ( ERM RF ) i
M TheSML
The SMLis
ERM uses
usedtheto
beta
predict
coefficient
requiredas
the measure
returns for
of relevant
individual
RF
risk.
securities
βM = 1 β
9 - 53
The CAPM and Market Risk
The SML and Security Valuation
9 - 10 FIGURE
Similarly,
Required
A is an B returns
is an
ER ki RF ( ERM RF ) i are forecast using
undervalued
overvalued
this equation.
security
security. because
SML its
Youexpected
Investor’s
can seewillreturn
that
sell
is
thegreater
to lock than
required
in gains, the
return
required
on any
but return. is
the security
selling
Expected A
Return A pressure
a
Investors
functionwillwill
of its
Required
Return A
systematic
‘flock’
cause to
the A market
and
risk bid
(β)
B
andthe
up
price market
toprice
fall,
RF
factors (RF
causing expected
the and
markettopremium
return
expected fall
return
till itto
for risk)
equals
rise untiltheit equals
βA βB β required
the required return.
return.
9 - 54
The CAPM in Summary
The SML and CML
9 - 55
Challenges to CAPM
• Empirical tests suggest:
– CAPM does not hold well in practice:
• Ex post SML is an upward sloping line
• Ex ante y (vertical) – intercept is higher that RF
• Slope is less than what is predicted by theory
– Beta possesses no explanatory power for predicting stock
returns (Fama and French, 1992)
• CAPM remains in widespread use despite the foregoing.
– Advantages include – relative simplicity and intuitive logic.
• Because of the problems with CAPM, other models have been
developed including:
– Fama-French (FF) Model
– Abitrage Pricing Theory (APT)
9 - 56
Alternative Asset Pricing Models
The Fama – French Model
9 - 57
Alternative Asset Pricing Models
The Arbitrage Pricing Theory
[9-10] i
ERa0b
i
1F1b
i
1F1
...
b
inF
n
9 - 58
Alternative Asset Pricing Models
The Arbitrage Pricing Theory – the Model
[9-10] i
ERa0b
i
1F1b
i
1F1
...
b
inF
n
– Where:
• ERi = the expected return on security i
• a0 = the expected return on a security with zero systematic risk
• bi = the sensitivity of security i to a given risk factor
• Fi = the risk premium for a given risk factor
9 - 60
Summary and Conclusions
9 - 61
Estimating the Ex Ante (Forecast) Beta
APPENDIX 1
Calculating a Beta Coefficient Using Ex Ante
Returns
9 - 63
Appendix 1 Agenda
9 - 64
The Beta Coefficient
• Under the theory of the Capital Asset Pricing Model total risk is
partitioned into two parts:
– Systematic risk
– Unsystematic risk – diversifiable risk
9 - 65
The Beta Coefficient
The Formula
Covariance of Returns between stock ' i' returns and the market
Beta
Variance of the Market Returns
COVi,M i
[9-7] i 2 i,M
σM M
9 - 66
The Term – “Relevant Risk”
• What does the term “relevant risk” mean in the context of the CAPM?
– It is generally assumed that all investors are wealth maximizing risk
averse people
– It is also assumed that the markets where these people trade are highly
efficient
– In a highly efficient market, the prices of all the securities adjust instantly
to cause the expected return of the investment to equal the required
return
– When E(r) = R(r) then the market price of the stock equals its inherent
worth (intrinsic value)
– In this perfect world, the R(r) then will justly and appropriately
compensate the investor only for the risk that they perceive as
relevant…
– Hence investors are only rewarded for systematic risk.
NOTE: The amount of systematic risk varies by investment. High systematic risk
occurs when R-square is high, and the beta coefficient is greater than 1.0
9 - 67
The Proportion of Total Risk that is Systematic
9 - 68
The Formula Approach to Measuring the Beta
Cov(k i k M )
Beta
Var(k M )
You need to calculate the covariance of the returns between the
stock and the market…as well as the variance of the market
returns. To do this you must follow these steps:
• Calculate the expected returns for the stock and the market
• Using the expected returns for each, measure the variance
and standard deviation of both return distributions
• Now calculate the covariance
• Use the results to calculate the beta
9 - 69
Ex ante Return Data
A Sample
This means that we have considered all of the possible outcomes in this discrete
probability distribution
Possible
Future State Possible Possible
of the Returns on Returns on
Economy Probability the Stock the Market
Boom 25.0% 28.0% 20.0%
Normal 50.0% 17.0% 11.0%
Recession 25.0% -14.0% -4.0%
100.0%
9 - 71
Measuring Expected Return on the Stock
From Ex Ante Return Data
The expected return is weighted average returns from the given ex ante
data
9 - 72
Measuring Expected Return on the Market
From Ex Ante Return Data
The expected return is weighted average returns from the given ex ante
data
9 - 73
Measuring Variances, Standard Deviations of
the Forecast Stock Returns
Using the expected return, calculate the deviations away from the mean, square those deviations and
then weight the squared deviations by the probability of their occurrence. Add up the weighted and
squared deviations from the mean and you have found the variance!
9 - 74
Measuring Variances, Standard Deviations of
the Forecast Market Returns
Now do this for the possible returns on the market
9 - 75
Covariance
From Chapter 8 you know the formula for the covariance between the
returns on the stock and the returns on the market is:
n _ _
[8-12]
COV
ABProb
i(
kA,i
ki)(
i
1
k
B,i-k)
B
9 - 76
Correlation Coefficient
Correlation is covariance normalized by the product of the standard deviations of both
securities. It is a ‘relative measure’ of co-movement of returns on a scale from -1 to +1.
The formula for the correlation coefficient between the returns on the stock and the returns on
the market is:
COV
AB
[8-13] AB
A B
The correlation coefficient will always have a value in the range of +1 to -1.
+1 – is perfect positive correlation (there is no diversification potential when combining these two
securities together in a two-asset portfolio.)
- 1 - is perfect negative correlation (there should be a relative weighting mix of these two
securities in a two-asset portfolio that will eliminate all portfolio risk)
9 - 77
Measuring Covariance
from Ex Ante Return Data
Using the expected return (mean return) and given data measure the deviations for
both the market and the stock and multiply them together with the probability of
occurrence…then add the products up.
9 - 78
The Beta Measured
Using Ex Ante Covariance (stock, market) and Market Variance
Now you can substitute the values for covariance and the variance of the
returns on the market to find the beta of the stock:
CovS,M .01335
Beta 1.8
VarM .007425
Since
Sincethe
thevariance
varianceof
ofthe
thereturns
returnsononthe
themarket
marketisis==.007425
.007425…the
…thebeta
betafor
for
the market is indeed equal to 1.0 !!!
the market is indeed equal to 1.0 !!!
9 - 80
Proving the Beta of Market = 1
If you now place the covariance of the market with itself value in the
beta formula you get:
Cov MM .007425
Beta 1.0
Var(R M ) .007425
9 - 81
How Do We use Expected and Required Rates
of Return?
Once you have estimated the expected and required rates of return, you can plot them on
the SML and see if the stock is under or overpriced.
% Return
E(Rs) = 5.0%
R(ks) = 4.76%
SML
E(kM)= 4.2%
Risk-free Rate = 3%
9 - 82
How Do We use Expected and Required Rates
of Return?
• The stock is fairly priced if the expected return = the required return.
• This is what we would expect to see ‘normally’ or most of the time in an efficient market where securities
are properly priced.
% Return
Risk-free Rate = 3%
9 - 83
Use of the Forecast Beta
• We can use the forecast beta, together with an estimate of the risk-free rate and the
market premium for risk to calculate the investor’s required return on the stock
using the CAPM:
9 - 84
Conclusions
9 - 85
Calculating the Beta using Trailing
Holding Period Returns
APPENDIX 2
The Regression Approach to Measuring the
Beta
• You need to gather historical data about the stock and the market
• You can use annual data, monthly data, weekly data or daily data.
However, monthly holding period returns are most commonly used.
• Daily data is too ‘noisy’ (short-term random volatility)
• Annual data will extend too far back in to time
• You need at least thirty (30) observations of historical data.
• Hopefully, the period over which you study the historical returns of the
stock is representative of the normal condition of the firm and its
relationship to the market.
• If the firm has changed fundamentally since these data were produced
(for example, the firm may have merged with another firm or have
divested itself of a major subsidiary) there is good reason to believe
that future returns will not reflect the past…and this approach to beta
estimation SHOULD NOT be used….rather, use the ex ante approach.
9 - 87
Historical Beta Estimation
The Approach Used to Create the Characteristic Line
In this example, we have regressed the quarterly returns on the stock against the
quarterly returns of a surrogate for the market (TSE 300 total return composite
index) and then using Excel…used the charting feature to plot the historical
points and add a regression trend line.
The ‘cloud’ of plotted points
Period HPR(Stock)
represents HPR(TSE
‘diversifiable 300)
or company C h a r a c t e r is t ic Lin e ( R e g r e s s io n )
2006.4
specific’ risk-4.0% 1.2%
in the securities returns 30.0%
2006.3 -16.0%
that can be eliminated from-7.0%
a portfolio 25.0%
2006.2 32.0%
through diversification. 12.0%
Since 20.0%
2006.1company-specific
16.0% risk can
8.0%be
Returns on Stock
15.0%
eliminated,-22.0%
2005.4 investors don’t require
-11.0%
compensation
2005.3 15.0%for it according
16.0% to 10.0%
2005.2Markowitz Portfolio Theory.
28.0% 13.0% 5.0%
2005.1 19.0% 7.0% 0.0%
2004.4 -16.0% -4.0% -40.0% -20.0% -5.0%0.0% 20.0% 40.0%
The regression line is a line of ‘best
2004.3 8.0% 16.0%
fit’ that describes the inherent -10.0%
2004.2 -3.0% -11.0%
relationship between the returns on -15.0%
2004.1 34.0% 25.0%
the stock and the returns on the
Returns on TSE 300
market. The slope is the beta
coefficient.
9 - 88
Characteristic Line
• The characteristic line is a regression line that represents the relationship between
the returns on the stock and the returns on the market over a past period of time. (It
will be used to forecast the future, assuming the future will be similar to the past.)
• The degree to which the characteristic line explains the variability in the dependent
variable (returns on the stock) is measured by the coefficient of determination.
(also known as the R2 (r-squared or coefficient of determination)).
• If the coefficient of determination equals 1.00, this would mean that all of the
points of observation would lie on the line. This would mean that the characteristic
line would explain 100% of the variability of the dependent variable.
• The alpha is the vertical intercept of the regression (characteristic line). Many
stock analysts search out stocks with high alphas.
9 - 89
Low R2
9 - 90
Characteristic Line for Imperial Tobacco
An Example of Volatility that is Primarily Company-Specific
Characteristic
Returns on
Line for Imperial
Imperial
Tobacco
Tobacco %
• • High alpha
High alpha
• R-square is very
• R-square is very
low
low≈≈0.02
0.02
• Beta is largely
• Beta is largely
irrelevant
irrelevant
Returns on
the Market %
(S&P TSX)
9 - 91
High R2
9 - 92
Characteristic Line General Motors
A Positive Beta with Predictive Power
Characteristic
Returns on
Line for GM
General
Motors % (high R2)
• • Positive alpha
Positive alpha
• • R-square is
R-square is
very
veryhigh
high≈≈0.9
0.9
• • Beta is positive
Beta is positive
and
andclose
closeto
to1.0
1.0
Returns on
the Market %
(S&P TSX)
9 - 93
An Unusual Characteristic Line
A Negative Beta with Predictive Power
Returns on
the Market %
(S&P TSX)
9 - 94
Diversifiable Risk
(Non-systematic Risk)
9 - 95
OK – lets go back and look at raw data
gathering and data normalization
9 - 96
Demonstration Through Example
9 - 98
Spreadsheet Data From Yahoo
Process:
– Go to http://ca.finance.yahoo.com
– Use the symbol lookup function to search for the
company you are interested in studying.
– Use the historical quotes button…and get 30 months
of historical data.
– Use the download in spreadsheet format feature to
save the data to your hard drive.
9 - 99
Spreadsheet Data From Yahoo
Alcan Example
9 - 100
Spreadsheet Data From Yahoo
Alcan Example
Volume
Volumeofof
Opening
Openingprice
priceper
pershare,
share,the
the trading
tradingdone
done
The
Theday, ininthe
day, highest
highestprice
priceper
pershare
shareduring
duringthethe thestock
stockon on
month
monthand the
and month,
month,the
thelowest
lowestprice
priceper
pershare
share theTSETSEininthethe
year month
year achieved
achievedduring
duringthe
themonth
monthand andthe
the monthinin
closing
closingprice
priceper
pershare
shareat
atthe
theend
end numbers
numbersofof
ofofthe
themonth
month board
board9lots
- 101
lots
Spreadsheet Data From Yahoo
Alcan Example
From Yahoo, the only information you can use is the closing price per
share and the date. Just delete the other columns.
Date Close
01-May-02 59.22
01-Apr-02 57.9
01-Mar-02 63.03
01-Feb-02 64.86
02-Jan-02 61.85
9 - 102
Acquiring the Additional Information You Need
Alcan Example
In addition to the closing price of the stock on a per share basis, you will need
to find out how many shares were outstanding at the end of the month and
whether any dividends were paid during the month.
You will also want to find the end-of-the-month value of the S&P/TSX Total
Return Composite Index (look in the green pages of the TSX Review)
9 - 103
Raw Company Data
Alcan Example
Closing
Price for Cash
Issued Alcan Dividends Adjustment Normalized Normalized
Date Capital AL.TO per Share Factor Stock Price Dividend
01-May-02 321,400,589 $59.22 $0.00 1.00 $59.22 $0.00
01-Apr-02 321,400,589 $57.90 $0.15 1.00 $57.90 $0.15
01-Mar-02 321,400,589 $63.03 $0.00 1.00 $63.03 $0.00
01-Feb-02 321,400,589 $64.86 $0.00 1.00 $64.86 $0.00
02-Jan-02 160,700,295 $123.70 $0.30 0.50 $61.85 $0.15
01-Dec-01 145,000,500 $111.40 $0.00 0.45 $50.26 $0.00
9 - 105
Calculating the HPR on the stock from the
Normalized Data
9 - 106
Now Put the data from the S&P/TSX Total
Return Composite Index in
Ending
Normalized Normalized TSX
Date Stock Price Dividend HPR Value
01-May-02 $59.22 $0.00 2.28% 16911.33
01-Apr-02 $57.90 $0.15 -7.90% 16903.36
01-Mar-02 $63.03 $0.00 -2.82% 17308.41
01-Feb-02 $64.86 $0.00 4.87% 16801.82
02-Jan-02 $61.85 $0.15 23.36% 16908.11
01-Dec-01 $50.26 $0.00 16881.75
You
Youwill
willfind
findthe
theTotal
TotalReturn
ReturnS&P/TSX
S&P/TSXComposite
Composite
Index
Indexvalues
valuesininTSX
TSXReview
Reviewfound
foundininthe
thelibrary.
library.
9 - 107
Now Calculate the HPR on the Market Index
(P1 P0 )
HPR
P0
16,911.33
-16,903.36
Ending
Normalized Normalized 16,903.36 TSX HPR on
0.05%
Date Stock Price Dividend HPR Value the TSX
01-May-02 $59.22 $0.00 2.28% 16911.33 0.05%
01-Apr-02 $57.90 $0.15 -7.90% 16903.36 -2.34%
01-Mar-02 $63.03 $0.00 -2.82% 17308.41 3.02%
01-Feb-02 $64.86 $0.00 4.87% 16801.82 -0.63%
02-Jan-02 $61.85 $0.15 23.36% 16908.11 0.16%
01-Dec-01 $50.26 $0.00 16881.75
Again,
Again,you
yousimply
simplyuse
usethe
theHPR
HPRformula
formulausing
usingthe
the
ending
endingvalues
valuesfor
forthe
thetotal
totalreturn
returncomposite
compositeindex.
index.
9 - 108
Regression In Excel
9 - 109
Regression
Defining the Data Ranges
Ending
Normalized Normalized TSX HPR on
Date Stock Price Dividend HPR Value the TSX
01-May-02 $59.22 $0.00 2.28% 16911.33 0.05%
01-Apr-02 $57.90 $0.15 -7.90% 16903.36 -2.34%
01-Mar-02 $63.03 $0.00 -2.82% 17308.41 3.02%
01-Feb-02 $64.86 $0.00 4.87% 16801.82 -0.63%
02-Jan-02 $61.85 $0.15 23.36% 16908.11 0.16%
01-Dec-01 $50.26 $0.00 16881.75
The
Thedependent
independent
variable
independent
dependent variable
variableisisisthe
variable the
isthe returns
the returns
returnson
returnson
on the
on the
the Stock.
theMarket.
Stock.
Market.
9 - 110
Now Use the Regression Function in Excel to
regress the returns of the stock against the
returns of the market
SUMMARY OUTPUT
CoefficientsStandard Error t Stat P-value Lower 95% Upper 95% Lower 95.0%Upper 95.0%
Intercept 59.3420816 2.8980481 20.4765686 3.3593E-05 51.29579335 67.38836984 51.2957934 67.38837
X Variable 1 3.55278937 33.463777 0.10616821 0.920560274 -89.35774428 96.46332302 -89.3577443 96.46332
• You can use the charting feature in Excel to create a scatter plot of
the points and to put a line of best fit (the characteristic line) through
the points.
• In Excel, you can edit the chart after it is created by placing the
cursor over the chart and ‘right-clicking’ your mouse.
• In this edit mode, you can ask it to add a trendline (regression line)
• Finally, you will want to interpret the Beta (X-coefficient) the alpha
(vertical intercept) and the coefficient of determination.
9 - 112
The Beta
Alcan Example
9 - 113
Copyright
Copyright © 2007 John Wiley & Sons Canada, Ltd. All rights reserved.
Reproduction or translation of this work beyond that permitted by Access
Copyright (the Canadian copyright licensing agency) is unlawful. Requests for
further information should be addressed to the Permissions Department, John
Wiley & Sons Canada, Ltd. The purchaser may make back-up copies for his or
her own use only and not for distribution or resale. The author and the publisher
assume no responsibility for errors, omissions, or damages caused by the use of
these files or programs or from the use of the information contained herein.
19 - 114