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Concept explainers
a)
To determine: The expected return on the portfolio of equally weighted Stock A, Stock B, and Stock C.
Introduction:
Expected return refers to the return that the investors expect on a risky investment in the future.
a)
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Answer to Problem 9QP
The expected return on the portfolio is 0.1308 or 13.08 percent.
Explanation of Solution
Given information:
Stock A’s return is 7 percent when the economy is booming, and 13 percent when the economy is in a bust cycle. The probability of having a boom is 65 percent, and the probability of having a bust cycle is 35 percent.
Stock B’s return is 15 percent when the economy is booming, and 3 percent when the economy is in a bust cycle. The probability of having a boom is 65 percent, and the probability of having a bust cycle is 35 percent.
Stock C’s return is 33 percent when the economy is booming, and (−6 percent) when the economy is in a bust cycle. The probability of having a boom is 65 percent, and the probability of having a bust cycle is 35 percent. All the above stocks carry an equal weight in the portfolio.
The formula to calculate the expected return on the stock:
The formula to calculate the portfolio expected return:
Where,
E(RP) refers to the expected return on a portfolio,
“x1 to xn” refers to the weight of each asset from 1 to “n” in the portfolio,
E(R1) to E(Rn) refers to the expected
Compute the expected return on Stock A:
R1 refers to the returns during a boom. The probability of having a boom is P1.R2 is the returns in a bust cycle. The probability of having a bust cycle is “P2”.
Hence, the expected return on Stock A is 0.091 or 9.1 percent.
Compute the expected return on Stock B:
R1 refers to the returns during a boom. The probability of having a boom isP1.R2 is the returns in a bust cycle. The probability of having a bust cycle is P2.
Hence, the expected return on Stock B is 0.108 or 10.8 percent.
Compute the expected return on Stock C:
R1 refers to the returns during a boom. The probability of having a boom is P1.R2 is the returns in a bust cycle. The probability of having a bust cycle is P2.
Hence, the expected return on Stock C is 0.1935 or 19.35 percent.
Compute the portfolio expected return:
The expected return on Stock A is 9.1 percent (“E(RStock A)”), the expected return on Stock B is 10.8 percent (“E(RStock B)”), and the expected return on Stock C is 19.35 percent (“E(RStock C)”).
It is given that the weight of the stocks is equal. Hence, the weight of Stock A is
Hence, the expected return on the portfolio is 0.1308 or 13.08 percent.
b)
To determine: The variance of the portfolio.
Introduction:
Portfolio expected return refers to the return that the investors expect on a portfolio of investments. Portfolio variance refers to the average difference of squared deviations of the actual data from the mean or expected returns.
b)
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Answer to Problem 9QP
The variance of the portfolio is 0.0137 or 1.37 percent.
Explanation of Solution
Given information:
Stock A’s return is 7 percent when the economy is booming and 13 percent when the economy is in a bust cycle. The probability of having a boom is 65 percent, and the probability of having a bust cycle is 35 percent.
Stock B’s return is 15 percent when the economy is booming and 3 percent when the economy is in a bust cycle. The probability of having a boom is 65 percent, and the probability of having a bust cycle is 35 percent.
Stock C’s return is 33 percent when the economy is booming and (−6 percent) when the economy is in a bust cycle. The probability of having a boom is 65 percent, and the probability of having a bust cycle is 35 percent.
The expected return on Stock A is 9.1 percent, the expected return on Stock B is 10.8 percent, and the expected return on Stock C is 19.35 percent (Refer to Part (a) of the solution). Stock A and Stock B have a weight of 20 percent each and Stock C has a weight of 60 percent in the portfolio.
The formula to calculate the portfolio expected return:
Where,
E(RP) refers to the expected return on a portfolio
“x1 to xn” refers to the weight of each asset from 1 to “n” in the portfolio
E(R1) to E(Rn) refers to the expected return on each asset from 1 to “n” in the portfolio
The formula to calculate the variance of the portfolio:
Compute the portfolioreturn during a boom:
The return on Stock A is 7 percent “RStock A”, the return on Stock B is 15 percent “RStock B”, and the return on Stock C is 33 percent “RStock C” when the economy is booming. It is given that the weight of Stock A is 20 percent (xStock A), the weight of Stock B is 20 percent (xStock B), and the weight of Stock C is 60 percent (xStock C).
Hence, the return on the portfolio during a boom is 0.242 or 24.2 percent.
Compute the portfolioreturn during a bust cycle:
The return on Stock A is 13 percent “RStock A”, the return on Stock B is 3 percent “RStock B”, and the return on Stock C is (−6 percent) “RStock C” when there is a bust cycle. It is given that the weight of Stock A is 20 percent (xStock A), the weight of Stock B is 20 percent (xStock B), and the weight of Stock C is 60 percent (xStock C).
Hence, the return on the portfolio during a bust cycle is −0.004 or (−0.4 percent).
Compute the portfolio expected return:
The expected return on Stock A is 9.1 percent (“E(RStock A)”), the expected return on Stock B is 10.8 percent (“E(RStock B)”), and the expected return on Stock C is 19.35 percent (“E(RStock C)”).
It is given that the weight of Stock A is 20 percent (xStock A), the weight of Stock B is 20 percent (xStock B), and the weight of Stock C is 60 percent (xStock C).
Hence, the expected return on the portfolio is 0.1559 or 15.59 percent.
Compute the variance:
R1 refers to the returns of the portfolio during a boom. The probability of having a boom is P1.R2is the returns of the portfolio in a bust cycle. The probability of having a bust cycle is P2. The expected return on the portfolio is 15.59 percent.
The possible returns during a boom are 24.2 percent and during a bust cycle is (−0.4 percent). The probability of having a boom is 65 percent and the probability of having a bust cycle is 35 percent.
Hence, the variance of the portfolio is 0.0137 or 1.37 percent.
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Chapter 13 Solutions
Fundamentals Of Corporate Finance, Tenth Standard Edition
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