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Cash-flow Risk, Discount Risk, and the Value Premium
Cash-flow Risk, Discount Risk, and the Value Premium

... the model results for prices and expected returns. In particular, it discusses the source of the value premium in our setting. Section IV contains a simulation of our model and comparison to data and evaluates the model’s ability to match basic moments of the returns data, both in the time series an ...
POST MODERN PORTFOLIO THEORY: ACHIEVING SUPERIOR UPSIDE
POST MODERN PORTFOLIO THEORY: ACHIEVING SUPERIOR UPSIDE

The convergence of binomial and trinomial option pricing models
The convergence of binomial and trinomial option pricing models

... subjects. Simultaneously, it is the reason why the option valuation procedure can be more or less complicated. In general, we can define the option as a financial security, which gives its owner the right to execute particular trade with the underlying asset, we denote it by S, at maturity time, T , ...
LOWER PARTIAL MOMENTS AS A MEASURE OF VULNERABILITY
LOWER PARTIAL MOMENTS AS A MEASURE OF VULNERABILITY

... measures, the LPMs are additively decomposable, so that vulnerability can be measured not  only  on  individual  or  household  level,  but  also  be  aggregated  for  different  population  groups.  And  finally,  LPMs  are  intuitively  interpretable,  an  attribute  that  is  of  eminent  importa ...
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Hedging of Financial Derivatives and Portfolio
Hedging of Financial Derivatives and Portfolio

... Risk management is an important issue in finance because of the considerable impact of the volatility of asset prices on financial holdings. Investment banks, financial corporations and insurance companies around the globe are searching for techniques to enhance their risk management practices. Beca ...
Prospective Interest Rate Differential and Currency Returns
Prospective Interest Rate Differential and Currency Returns

... The uncovered interest parity (UIP) hypothesizes that a high interest rate foreign currency is expected to depreciate by the interest rate differential between the foreign and domestic risk free rates. Numerous empirical studies strongly reject the UIP (Fama (1984), Hodrick and Srivastava (1984)) an ...
Mean-Reverting Models in Financial and Energy Markets
Mean-Reverting Models in Financial and Energy Markets

... markets get plucked away from their non-event levels and we observe them go back to more or less the levels they started from ...
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... Robeco emphasizes the interconnection of the above mentioned risk types. Especially in stressed markets, the mentioned types of risk tend to reinforce each other. The mentioned types of risks and the processes to monitor them are described below. 7.1 Market risk Market risk is the risk of adverse mo ...
OPTIMAL PORTFOLIO UNDER VaR AND ES 1. Introduction
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... In the paper, the portfolio optimization problem involves procedures to provide the portfolio with the minimal risk in the class of portfolios with a given expected return. We will construct two series of portfolios minimizing the VaR and minimizing the ES. For the financial position X and λ ∈ (0, 1 ...
Heterogeneous Risk Preferences in Financial Markets
Heterogeneous Risk Preferences in Financial Markets

... differ in their risk aversion parameter, their rate of time preference, and their beliefs. However, they focus on issues of long run survival and price. I build on their results by studying how changes in the distribution of preferences effect the short run dynamics of the model, while focusing on a ...
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Are the GMO Predictions of Asset Style Returns Accurate
Are the GMO Predictions of Asset Style Returns Accurate

... Exhibit 1 shows the predicted and realized returns for the equity funds and the bond funds. The predicted returns are adjusted by expense ratios. The correlation between the predicted and realized returns for all assets is 0.828. For equities it is 0.954. For bonds it is 0.959. These are down from t ...
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More Finance Questions
More Finance Questions

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... technique and method of Generalized Methods of Moments (GMM) by regressing these two model and their out put as results indicated that form Fama and French model just two to three factors showed variation which were found to be common as cross section variations in the return of the stock comparativ ...
1/N and Long Run Optimal Portfolios
1/N and Long Run Optimal Portfolios

Investment Options - PFM Asset Management
Investment Options - PFM Asset Management

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... Changes in net working capital frequently accompany capital expenditure decisions. The recovery of working capital in the terminal cash flow occurs because at the end of the project’s life the need for increased net working capital investment is assumed to end. ...
An Analytic Framework for Computing Value-at
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Equilibrium Analysis of Expected Shortfall
Equilibrium Analysis of Expected Shortfall

... This article analyzes the impact of market-risk regulation on portfolio choice and assets prices. We study the impact of Expected Shortfall (ES), its partial equilibrium incentives, and the general equilibrium asset-pricing implications. This is motivated by the recent advancement in risk measuremen ...
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Modern portfolio theory

Modern portfolio theory (MPT) is a theory of finance that attempts to maximize portfolio expected return for a given amount of portfolio risk, or equivalently minimize risk for a given level of expected return, by carefully choosing the proportions of various assets. Although MPT is widely used in practice in the financial industry and several of its creators won a Nobel memorial prize for the theory, in recent years the basic assumptions of MPT have been widely challenged by fields such as behavioral economics.MPT is a mathematical formulation of the concept of diversification in investing, with the aim of selecting a collection of investment assets that has lower overall risk than any other combination of assets with the same expected return. This is possible, intuitively speaking, because different types of assets sometimes change in value in opposite directions. For example, to the extent prices in the stock market move differently from prices in the bond market, a combination of both types of assets can in theory generate lower overall risk than either individually. Diversification can lower risk even if assets' returns are positively correlated.More technically, MPT models an asset's return as a normally or elliptically distributed random variable, defines risk as the standard deviation of return, and models a portfolio as a weighted combination of assets, so that the return of a portfolio is the weighted combination of the assets' returns. By combining different assets whose returns are not perfectly positively correlated, MPT seeks to reduce the total variance of the portfolio return. MPT also assumes that investors are rational and markets are efficient.MPT was developed in the 1950s through the early 1970s and was considered an important advance in the mathematical modeling of finance. Since then, some theoretical and practical criticisms have been leveled against it. These include evidence that financial returns do not follow a normal distribution or indeed any symmetric distribution, and that correlations between asset classes are not fixed but can vary depending on external events (especially in crises). Further, there remains evidence that investors are not rational and markets may not be efficient. Finally, the low volatility anomaly conflicts with CAPM's trade-off assumption of higher risk for higher return. It states that a portfolio consisting of low volatility equities (like blue chip stocks) reaps higher risk-adjusted returns than a portfolio with high volatility equities (like illiquid penny stocks). A study conducted by Myron Scholes, Michael Jensen, and Fischer Black in 1972 suggests that the relationship between return and beta might be flat or even negatively correlated.
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