FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT(LL)-TEXT
FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT(LL)-TEXT
16th Edition
ISBN: 9781337902618
Author: Brigham
Publisher: CENGAGE L
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Chapter 25, Problem 4MC

You have been hired at the investment firm of Bowers & Noon. One of its clients doesn’t understand the value of diversification or why stocks with the biggest standard deviations don’t always have the highest expected returns. Your assignment is to address the client’s concerns by showing the client how to answer the following questions:

d. Construct a plausible graph that shows risk (as measured by portfolio standard deviation) on the x-axis and expected rate of return on the y-axis. Now add an illustrative feasible (or attainable) set of portfolios and show what portion of the feasible set is efficient. What makes a particular portfolio efficient? Don’t worry about specific values when constructing the graph—merely illustrate how things look with “reasonable” data.

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In a seminal article on portfolio theory, Markowitz (1952) illustrated that investors are not compensated for taking on firm specific or idiosyncratic risk; however, they are compensated for taking market or systemic risk. Use your understanding of the Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM), statistical concepts such as standard deviation and variance, and our ideas about market efficiency and indicate whether you believe that this is a good theory. Include at least two citations that support your response.
Which of the following choices best completes the following statement? Explain. An investor with a higher degree of risk aversion, compared to one with a lower degree, will most prefer investment portfoliosa. with higher risk premiums.b. that are riskier (with higher standard deviations).c. with lower Sharpe ratios.d. with higher Sharpe ratios.
When working with the CAPM, which of the following factors can be determined with the most precision?   a. The most appropriate risk-free rate, rRF.     b. The market risk premium (RPM).     c. The beta coefficient, bi, of a relatively safe stock.     d. The expected rate of return on the market, rM.     e. The beta coefficient of "the market," which is the same as the beta of an average stock.
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