Introduction to Corporate Finance

(Tina Meador) #1
PART 2: VALUATION, RISK AND RETURN

7-1 EXPECTED RETURNS


Ultimately, people want to know what return they should expect from an investment. Investors and
corporate managers decide upon investments based on their best judgements about what the future will
hold. In finance, when we use the term expected return, we have in mind a ‘best-guess’ estimate of how an

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+8%


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+2%


+0%


2%


4%


6%


8%


1.0


0.5


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Millions

Change in value

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Volume

Daily SPHB price
S&P 500 Index daily price





LEARNING OBJECTIVES


After studying this chapter, you will be able to:

illustrate three different approaches
for estimating an asset’s expected
return
calculate a portfolio’s expected return,
standard deviation and its beta

explain how the capital asset pricing
model (CAPM) links an asset’s beta to its
expected return
describe the concept of market efficiency
and its important lessons for investors.

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In this chapter, we continue our study of the
relationship between risk and return. We will see
that a share’s beta, a measure of how much a share’s
return varies in response to variations in overall
market returns, is an important determinant of its
expected return. This is the central insight of the
capital asset pricing model (CAPM), one of the most

important ideas in modern finance. The scholars
who developed the model earned a Nobel Prize in
Economics in 1990 for their research. The CAPM is
useful not only for investors in financial markets but
also for managers who need to understand what
returns shareholders expect on the money they
contribute to corporate ventures.

expected return
A forecast of the return that
an asset will earn over some
future period of time


Source: ‘Crossing Wall Street’, CWS Market Review, 4 January 2013
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