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Transcript
Chapter 8
Risk-Aversion, Capital Asset
Allocation,
and Markowitz PortfolioSelection Model
By
Cheng Few Lee
Joseph Finnerty
John Lee
Alice C Lee
Donald Wort
1
Outline
8.1 Utility Theory, Utility Functions, and Indifference Curves
8.1.1 Utility Theory
8.1.2 Utility Functions
8.1.3 Risk Aversion and Asset Allocation
8.1.4 Indifference Curves
8.2 Efficient Portfolios
8.2.1 Portfolio Combinations
8.2.2 Short Selling
8.3 Techniques for Calculating the Efficient Frontier with Short Selling
8.3.1 The Normal Distribution
8.3.2 The Log-Normal Distribution
8.3.3 Mathematical Method to Calculate Efficient Frontier
8.3.4 Portfolio Determination with Specific Adjustment for Short Selling
8.3.5 Portfolio Determination without Short Selling
8.4 Summary
2
Markowitz Model
In this chapter basic portfolio analysis concepts and techniques discussed
in the Markowitz portfolio-selection model and other related issues in
portfolio analysis.
The Markowitz model is based on several assumptions concerning the
behavior of investors:
1.A probability distribution of possible returns over some holding period
can be estimated by investors.
2.Investors have single-period utility functions in which they maximize
utility within the framework of diminishing marginal utility of wealth.
3.Variability about the possible values of return is used by investors to
measure risk.
4.Investors use only expected return and risk to make investment decisions.
5.Expected return and risk as used by investors are measured by the first
two moments of the probability distribution of returns-expected value and
variance.
6.Return is desirable; risk is to be avoided.
3
8.1 Utility Theory, Utility Functions, and
Indifference Curves
8.1.1 Utility Theory
8.1.2 Utility Functions
8.1.3 Risk Aversion and Asset Allocation
8.1.4 Indifference Curves
4
8.1.1 Utility Theory
Utility theory is the foundation for the theory of choice
under uncertainty. Following Henderson and Quandt
(1980), cardinal and ordinal theories are the two major
alternatives used by economists to determine how
people and societies choose to allocate scarce resources
and to distribute wealth among one another over time.1
1 A cardinal utility implies that a consumer is capable of assigning to every
commodity or combination of commodities a number representing the amount or
degree of utility associated with it. An ordinary utility implies that a consumer needs
not be able to assign numbers that represent (in arbitrary unit) the degree or amount of
utility associated with commodity or combination of commodity. The consumer can
only rank and order the amount or degree of utility associated with commodity.
5
8.1.2 Utility Functions
An upward-sloping relationship between utility and wealth
identifies the phenomena of increasing wealth and increasing
satisfaction as being directly related.
These relationships can be classified into linear, concave, and
convex utility functions in Figure 8.1.
6
8.1.2 Utility Functions
The utility function can be expressed in terms of wealth:
U  f  w ,  w 
where w indicates expected future wealth and
 w represents the predicted standard deviation of the
possible divergence of actual future wealth from w .
Investors are expected to prefer a higher expected future
wealth to a lower value. Moreover, they are generally
risk averse as well.
These assumptions imply that the indifference curves
relating to w and  wwill be upward sloping (Figure 8.2).
7
8.1.2 Utility Functions
FIGURE 8.2 Indifference Curves of Utility Functions
Von-Newmann and
Morgenstern (VNM, 1947)
define investor utility as a
function of rates of return or
wealth. Rational investors are
expected to prefer a higher
expected future wealth to a
lower value, and are generally
risk averse.
Each indifference curve is an
expected utility isoquant
showing all the various
combinations of risk and
return that provide an equal
amount of expected utility for
the investor.
8
8.1.2 Utility Functions
The expected utility can be calculated in terms of
the probabilities of occurrence associated with
each of the possible returns:
n
(8.1)
E U    U  wi Pi
i
where:
E U  = expected utility;
U  wi  = the utility of the ith outcome wi ; and
Pi = the Probability of the ith outcome.
9
Sample Problem 8.1
Table 8.1 Possible Outcomes of Investments A and B
wi
Outcome
10
5
1
A
wi
Probability
Outcome
2/5
2/5
1/5
9
3
B
Probability
2/3
1/3
Given investments A and B as shown in the table,
determine the utilities of A and B for the given
utility functions:
1.
U (w)  wi
10
2.
U ( w)  w
3.
U ( w)  w  wi
2
i
2
i
Sample Problem 8.1
Solution
1. For U (w)  wi
10   52  5   15 1  6 15
2
1
9



3
3  3  7
2
5
Utility A =
Utility B =
2. For U ( w)  wi2
Utility A =
Utility B =
11
100   52  25  15 1  50 15
2
1
81



3
3  9   57
2
5
Sample Problem 8.1
3. U ( w)  w  wi (use results from 1 and 2)
2
i
Utility A = 50 15  6 15  44
Utility B = 57  7  50
In all three cases, B has the higher degree of utility.
12
8.1.2.1 Linear Utility Function and Risk
It is useful now to consider how the shape of an individual’s utility
function affects his or her reaction to risk. Assume that an individual
who has $5,000 and whose behavior is a linear utility function [Figure
8-1(a)] is offered a chance to gain $10,000 with a probability of 1/2 or
to lose $10,000 with a probability of 1/2. What should he or she pay
for such an opportunity? The answer is nothing, for as can be seen in
Figure 8-3, this individual would be no better or worse off accepting
or rejecting this opportunity. If he rejected the offer, his wealth would
be $5,000 with utility U1; if he paid nothing for the opportunity, his
wealth would remain as $5,000 with Utility U1. Any payment for this
chance would reduce his wealth and therefore be undesirable. This is
so because the expected value of the fair game is zero:
E Vgame  
13
1
2
10, 000   12  10, 000   0
8.1.2.1 Linear Utility Function and Risk
Figure 8.3 illustrates this linear utility function concept in the previous example.
14
8.1.2.2 Concave Utility Function and Risk
• Using the number in previous example, Figure 8.4 show that the utility of
winning 𝑈𝑤 − 𝑈𝑖 is less than the utility of losing 𝑈𝑖 − 𝑈𝐿 .
• Therefore, the utility of doing nothing is greater than the expected utility of
accepting the fair game.
• E(UF )  12 (Uw  UL ) is the expected utility of the fair game under a concave utility
function.
• E(U ) is the expected utility of the fair game under a linear utility function.
Figure 8.4 Utility
Function for Risk-Averse
Investor
15
Sample Problem 8.2
Given the following utility functions for four investors,
what can you conclude about their reaction towards a
fair game?
1.
u ( w)  w  4
1 2
2. u ( w)  w  w
2
16
2 w
(quadratic utility function)
3.
u(w)  e
4.
u(w)  w  4w
2
(negative exponential utility function), and
Sample Problem 8.2
Evaluate the second derivative of the utility according to the following rules:
u ''  w  0 implies risk averse
u ''  w  0 implies risk neutral
u ''  w  0 implies risk seeker
Solution
1.
u ( w)  w  4
u( w)  1
u '' ( w)  0
This implies risk neutrality; it is indifference for the investor to accept or reject a
fair gamble.
17
Sample Problem 8.2
2.
1 2
u ( w)  w  w
2
u( w)  1  w2
u '' ( w)  2w  0 (We assume wealth is nonnegative.)
This implies the investor is risk averse and would reject a fair gamble.
3.
u ( w)  e 2 w
u ( w)  2e 2 w
u '' ( w)  4 e 2 w  0
This implies risk adversity; the investor would reject a fair gamble.
18
Sample Problem 8.2
4.
u ( w)  w2  4w
u( w)  2w  4
u '' ( w)  2  0
This implies risk preference; the investor would seek a fair
gamble.
19
8.1.3 Risk Aversion and Asset Allocation
Assigning a portfolio with expected return and variance of returns, the
following utility score:
1
(8.2)
U  E (r )   A  s 2
2
Where U = utility, E(r) = expected return on the asset or portfolio, A =
coefficient of risk aversion, and s2 = variance of returns.
Table 8.2 presents the utility scores that would be assigned by each
investor to each portfolio in Sample Problem 8.3.
Table 8.2 Utility Scores Assigned by Each Investor to Each Portfolio
20
Sample Problem 8.4
•
Assuming an investor who faces a risk-free rate and a risky portfolio with
expected return and standard deviation will find that for any choice of W, the
expected return of the complete portfolio is given by:
(8.3)
E  rC   rf  W  E rp  rf 


The variance of the complete portfolio is:
 C2  W 2 2p
(8.4)
To solve the utility maximization problem, we write the problem as follows:
1
1
(8.5)
Max U  E r  A 2  r  W  E r  r   AW 2 2
 
•
•
 C
•
2
C
f

 p
f

2
p
Taking derivative of U with respective to W and set the derivative of this
expression to zero, W*, as follows:
E  rp   r f
(8.6)
*
W 
A 2p
If E  rp   16%,  P  20%, rp  6%, and a coefficient of risk aversion A  3, then
W* 
0.16  0.06
3   0.20 
2
 0.83
Therefore, the investor will invest 83% of his investment budget in the risky
asset and 17% of his investment budget in the risk-free asset.
21
8.1.4 Indifference Curves
FIGURE 8.5 Indifference Curves for Various Types of Individuals
Note:
The slope of the
indifference curve is a
function of the investor’s
particular preference for a
lower but safer return
versus a larger but riskier
return.
22
(a) Risk-Averse investor
(b) Risk-Neutral Investor
(c) Risk-Seeking Investor
(d) Level of Risk-Aversion
Indifference curves can be
used to indicate investors’
willingness to trade risk for
return; now investors’
ability to trade risk for
return needs to be
represented in terms of
indifference curves and
efficient portfolios.
8.2 Efficient Portfolios
8.2.1 Portfolio Combinations
8.2.2 Short Selling
23
8.2.1 Portfolio Combinations
Optimal Portfolio
For each of the combinations of individual securities and
inefficient portfolios in Figure 8.6 there is a corresponding
portfolio along the efficient frontier that either has a higher
return given the same risk or a lower risk given the same return.
The optimal portfolio along the efficient frontier is not unique
with this model and depends upon the risk/return tradeoff utility
function of each investor. Portfolio selection, then, is
determined by plotting investors’ utility functions together with
the efficient-frontier set of available investment opportunities.
No two investors will select the same portfolio except by chance
or if their utility curves are identical.
24
8.2.1 Portfolio Combinations
FIGURE The Minimum-Variance Set
The area within curve XVYZ is the feasible opportunity set representing all possible portfolio
combinations. The curve YV represents all possible efficient portfolios and is the efficient frontier.
The line segment VX is on the feasible opportunity set, but not on the efficient frontier; all points on
VX represent inefficient portfolios.
 Maximum-variance portfolio
Minimum-variance portfolio
25
Note: Points on the
efficient do not
dominate one another.
While point Y has
considerably higher
return than point V, it
also has considerably
higher risk.
8.2.1 Portfolio Combinations
Optimal Portfolio
The optimal portfolio would be the one that provides the
highest utility—a point in the northwest direction (higher return
and lower risk). This point will be at the tangent of a utility
curve and the efficient frontier. The tangency point investor in
Figure 8.6 is point X’; for the risk-averse it is point Y. Each
investor is logically selecting the optimal portfolio given his or
her risk-return preference, and neither is more correct than the
other.
26
8.2.1Portfolio Combinations
FIGURE 8.6 Indifference Curves and The Minimum-Variance Set
X’ is the optimal
portfolio choice
for more-risk
averse investor
 More-risk averse
investor (a higher slope
indifference curve)
Y is the optimal
portfolio choice
for less-risk
averse investor.
 Less risk-averse
investor (a lower slope
indifference curve)
Note: Y is the optimal portfolio choice for less-risk averse investor. Point Y is also called the maximumreturn portfolio, since there is no other portfolio with a higher return. It could also be a portfolio of securities,
all having the same highest levels of risk and return. Point Z is normally a single security with the lowest level
of return, although it could be a portfolio of securities, all having the same low level of return.
27
8.2.1Portfolio Combinations
Figure 8.7 shows that the additional reduction in
portfolio variance rapidly levels off as the number of
securities is increased beyond five.
FIGURE 8.7 Native Diversification Reduces Risk to the Systematic Level in a
Randomly Selected Portfolio
28
8.2.2 Short Selling
•
•
•
29
Short selling (or “going short”) is a very regulated type of market
transaction. It involves selling shares of a stock that are borrowed in
expectation of a fall in the security’s price. When and if the price
declines, the investor buys an equivalent number of shares of the same
stock at the new lower price and returns to the lender the stock that was
borrowed.
The Federal Reserve Board requires short selling customers to deposit 50
percent of the net proceeds of such short sales with the brokerage firm
carrying out the transaction.
Another key requirement of a short sale, set by the Securities and
Exchange Act of 1934, is that the short sale must occur at a price higher
than the preceding sale—or at the same price as the preceding sale, if
that took place at a higher price than a preceding price. This is the socalled uptick or zero-tick rule. It prevents the price of a security from
successively falling because of continued short selling.
8.2.2 Short Selling
FIGURE 8.8A Short Selling Allowed
The Markowitz model (1952) does NOT allow short selling; while the Black (1972) model
allows for short selling. That is, the non-negativity constraint on the amount that can be
invested in each security is relaxed. A negative value for the weight invested in a security is
allowed, tantamount to allowing a short sale of the security.
30
8.2.2 Short Selling
FIGURE 8.8B Efficient Frontiers With and Without Short Selling and Margin Requirements
Short Selling NOT Allowed
The major difference between the frontier in Figure 8-10A (short selling) and Figure 8-10B (no short
selling) is the disappearance of the end points Y and Z.
31
Figure 8.8B (no short selling)
The major difference between Fig. 8.8(a) and 8.8(b) is that an
investor could sell the lowest-return security (Y).
If the number of short sales is unrestricted, then by a continuous
short selling of X and reinvesting in Y the investor could
generate an infinite expected return.
Hence the upper bound of the highest-return portfolio would no
longer be Y but infinity (shown by the arrow on the top of the
efficient frontier).
Likewise the investor could short sell the highest-return security
Y and reinvest the proceeds into the lowest-yield security X,
thereby generating a return less than the return on the lowestreturn security.
Given no restriction on the amount of short selling, an infinitely
negative return can be achieved, thereby removing the lower
bound of X on the efficient frontier. But rational investors will
not short sell a high-return stock and buy a low-return stock and
buy a low-return stock.
32
8.2.2 Short Selling (Dyl Model)
The Dyl introduced short selling with margin requirements by
creating a new set of risky securities, the ones sold short, which
are negatively correlated with the existing set of risky securities.
These new securities greatly enhance the diversification effect
when they are placed in portfolios.
The Dyl model affects the efficient frontier in two ways:
(1) If the investor were to combine in equal weight any long position in a
security or portfolio with a short position in a security or a portfolio, the
resulting portfolio would yield zero return and zero variance
(2) Any combination of unequal weighted long or short positions would
yield portfolios with higher returns and lower risk levels.
Overall, these two effects will yield an efficient frontier that
dominates the Markowitz efficient frontier. Figure 8.8B
compares the Dyl and Markowitz efficient frontiers.
33
8.3 Techniques for Calculating the Efficient
Frontier with Short Selling
• 8.3.1
The Normal Distribution
• 8.3.2 The Log-Normal Distribution
• 8.3.3 Mathematical Method to Calculate
Efficient Frontier
• 8.3.4 Portfolio Determination with Specific
Adjustment for Short Selling
• 8.3.5 Portfolio Determination without
Short Selling
34
8.3 Techniques for Calculating the Efficient Frontier with
Short Selling
One way of determining the optimal investment proportions in a
portfolio is to hold the return constant and solve for the weighting factors
(W1 ,Wn for n securities) that minimize the variance, given the
constraint that all weights sum to one and that the constant return equals
the expected return developed from the portfolio. The optimal weights
can then be obtained by minimizing the Lagrange function C for
portfolio variance.
n


C   WW
r




1

W

i
j ij i j
1
i 
i 1 j 1
 i 1 
n
n


+ 2  E *   Wi E  Ri  
i 1


n
in which 1 and 2 are the Lagrange multipliers, E and
of return and expected rate of return for security i and j
*
35
(8.8)
E ( Ri ) are targeted rate
8.3.1 The Normal Distribution
•
The Normal (probability) distribution is a bell-shaped curve
centered on the mean of a given population or sample distribution.
The area under the curve is an accumulation of probabilities that
sum to one.
Suppose the mean return on a particular investment is 10% for a
given period, and that historically these returns have a variance of
0.16%, then the probabilities are of obtaining a 15% or greater
return, or a return less than or equal to 8% can be calculated as:

 
P X  0.15 Rp  0.1,  p2  0.0016 , P X  0.18 Rp  0.1,  p2  0.0016
0.15  0.1
0.08  0.1

 

P z 
 1.25  , P  z 
 0.5 
0.04
0.04

 

36

(8.9)
8.3.2 The Log-Normal Distribution
If the return of portfolio p follows log-normal
distribution, then its expected value and standard
deviation can be expressed as
E (1  Rp )  e
 
E rp 1 2 2
where rp  ln(1  R p ) and  is the standard deviation
of rp .

 (1  R p )  e
2
 
2 E rp  2
 e 1
2
where rp  ln(1  R p ) and 2  Var  rp  .
The applications of log-normal distribution are
discussed in detail in Chapter 19.
37
8.3.3 Mathematical Method to Calculate
Efficient Frontier**
One of the goals of portfolio analysis is minimizing the risk
or variance of the portfolio, subject to the portfolio’s
attaining some target expected rate of return, and also
subject to the portfolio weights’ summing to one. The
problem can be stated mathematically:
n
n
Min  p2  WW
i j ij
i 1 j 1
Subject to
(8.10)
n
(i)
*
W
E
R

E


 i i
i 1
where
E *is the target expected return and
n
(ii)
W
i 1
i
 1.0
**We also provide graphical method to calculate efficient frontier. Please see
Appendix 8A for detailed graphical method to calculate efficient frontier.
38
8.3.3 Mathematical Method to Calculate Efficient Frontier
The Lagrangian objective function can be written:
n


 * n

C  WW
Cov
R
R


1

W


E

W
E
R
 i j  1   i  2   i  i 
i
j
i 1 j 1
i 1
 i 1 


n
n
(8.11)
For three securities case, the Lagrangian objective function is as
follow:
C  W12 12  W22 22  W32 32  2WW
1 2 12  2WW
1 3 13  2W2W3 23
 1 1  W1  W2  W3   2 E *  W1 E ( R1 )  W2 E ( R2 )  W3 E ( R3 )
Taking the partial derivatives of this equation with
respect to each of the variables, W1, W2, W3, λ1, λ2, and
setting the resulting five equations equal to zero yields
the minimization of risk subject to the Lagrangian
constraints.
39
8.3.3 Mathematical Method to Calculate
Efficient Frontier
C
C
 2W112  2W212  2W313  1  2 E ( R1 )  0
 E*  W1E ( R1 )  W2 E ( R2 )  W3 E ( R3 )  0
W1
2
C
 2W2 22  2W112  2W3 23  1  2 E ( R2 )  0 C  1  W  W  W  0
1
2
3
W2
1
(8.12)
C
 2W3 32  2W113  2W2 23  1  2 E ( R3 )  0
W3
•
This system of five equations and five unknowns can be solved by
the use of matrix algebra. Briefly, the Jacobian matrix of these
A
W
K
equations is:








40
2 11
2 12
2 13
1
2 21
2 22
2 23
1
2 31
2 32
2 33
1
1
1
1
0
E  R1 
E  R2 
E  R3 
0
 E  R1  
0
W1 

 
W 
 E  R2  
0
 2
 E  R3    W3    0  (8.13)

 
 
0 

1
 1
 E* 
 2 
0 
 
Sample Problem 8.4
•
41
This example focuses on the returns and risk of the first three
industrial companies, Johnson & Johnson (JNJ), International
Business Machines Corp. (IBM), and Boeing Co. (BA), for the
period April 2001 to April 2010. The data used are tabulated in
Table 8.3.
Sample Problem 8.4
Plugging the data listed in Table 8.3 and E*= 0.00106 into the matrix above yields:







0.0050
0.0014
0.0014
1
0.0014
0.0141
0.0012
1
0.0014
0.0012
0.0164
1
1
1
1
0
0.0080
0.0050
0.0113
0
0.0080 
W1 
 0 
W 
 0 
0.0050 
2
 


0.0113   W3    0 
 




0 
1
1
 


 2 
0.00106 
0 
(8.14)
When matrix A is properly inverted and postmultiplied by K, the solution vector
is derived:
W
A 1 K
W1 
 0.5862 
W 
 1.3183 
2
 


W3    0.9046 
 



0.0430
 1


 2 
 4.9377 
42
(8.15)
8.3.4 Portfolio Determination with Specific
Adjustment for Short Selling
The Markowitz model determines optimal asset allocation by
minimizing portfolio variance using a constrained optimization
procedure:
3
3
(8.16)
Min Var R 
WW 
  
p
3
W E  R   E
Subject to:(i)
i 1
43
i
i
*
i 1 j 1
and (ii)
i
j
ij
3
W
i 1
i
 1.0
8.3.4 Portfolio Determination with Specific
Adjustment for Short Selling
The Lagrangian function is
 n



(8.17)
Min L  WW


W
E
R

E


W

1


i
j
1  i
i
 2  i 
i 1 j 1
i 1
 i 1

Again, derivatives with respect to Wi ’s and  ’s are found. Setting these
equations equal to zero leaves the following system of equations in matrix
form:
n
n
n
*
A
 2 11

 2 21


 2 n1
E R 
1

 1
W
2 12
2 1n
2 22
2 2 n
2 n 2
2 nn
E  R2 
E  Rn 
1
1
E  R1 
E  R2 
1
E  Rn 
1
0
0
0
0
E *  0.00106
44
1
K

0
W1 

 
W 

0
 2

 
 
      

0
Wn 

 E* 
 1 

 
 


 2 
 1 
(8.18)
8.3.4 Portfolio Determination with Specific
Adjustment for Short Selling
By solving using the identity-matrix technique the weights for the
three securities can be obtained in previous problem 8.4:
JNJ  0.5862
IBM  1.3183
BA  -0.9046
By using the following relationship to rescale these weights so
that the second constraint for the sum of the absolute values of
the weights to equal one is satisfied:
WA 
45
A
ABC
(8.19)
8.3.4 Portfolio Determination with Specific
Adjustment for Short Selling
The resealed absolute weights are:
0.5862
 0.2087
0.5862  1.3183  0.9046
1.3183
WIBM 
 0.4693
0.5862  1.3183  0.9046
0.9046
WBA 
 0.3220
0.5862  1.3183  0.9046
WJNJ 
•
The return on this portfolio is:
R p   0.2087  0.0080    0.4693 0.0050    0.3220  0.0113
 0.76%
•
The variance:
2
 p2   0.2087   0.0025    0.4693  0.0071   0.3220   0.0083
2
2
 2  0.2087  0.4693 0.0007   2  0.2087  0.3220  0.0007   2  0.4693 0.3220  0.0006 
 0.00302
46
8.3.5 Portfolio Determination without Short Selling
The minimization problem under study can be modified to include
the restriction of no short selling by adding a third constraint:
(8.20)
Wi  0,
i  1, , N
The addition of this non-negativity constraint precludes negative
values for the weights (i.e., no short selling).
The problem now is a quadratic programming problem except that
the optimal portfolio may fall in an unfeasible region (as shown in
Figure 8.9).
47
8.5 Conclusion
This chapter has focused on the foundations of Markowitz’s model and on
derivation of efficient frontier through the creation of efficient portfolios of
varying risk and return. It has been shown that an investor can increase expected
utility through portfolio diversification as long as there is no perfect positive
correlation among the component securities. The extent of the benefit increases as
the correlation is lower, and also increases with the number of securities included.
The Markowitz model can be applied to develop the efficient frontier that
delineates the optimal portfolios that match the greatest return with a given
amount of risk. Also, this frontier shows the dominant portfolios as having the
lowest risk given a stated return. This chapter has included methods of solving for
the efficient frontier both graphically and through a combination of calculus and
matrix algebra, with and without explicitly incorporating short selling.
Next chapters will illustrate how the crushing computational load involved in
implementing the Markowitz model can be alleviated through the use of the index
portfolio, and how the tenets of the Markowitz efficient frontier are still met.
48