254 Part 3 Financial Assets
saw that the risk-free rate as measured by the rate on U.S. Treasury securities
is called the nominal, or quoted, rate; and it consists of two elements: (1) a real
in" ation-free rate of return, r* and (2) an in" ation premium, IP, equal to the anticipated
rate of in! ation.^23 Thus, rRF $ r* + IP. The real rate on long-term Treasury bonds has
historically ranged from 2% to 4%, with a mean of about 3%. Therefore, if no
in! ation were expected, long-term Treasury bonds would yield about 3%. How-
ever, as the expected rate of in! ation increases, a premium must be added to the
real risk-free rate of return to compensate investors for the loss of purchasing
power that results from in! ation. Therefore, the 6% rRF shown in Figure 8-8 might
be thought of as consisting of a 3% real risk-free rate of return plus a 3% in! ation
premium: rRF $ r* " IP $ 3% " 3% $ 6%.
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Key Inputs Beta
0.0 0.5 1.0 1.5 2.0 2.5
Required Rate
of Return (%)
6.0%
11.0
5.0
rRF
rM
RPM = rM – rRF
Riskless asset:
Stock L:
Stock A:
Stock H:
0.0
0.5
1.0
2.0
6.00%
8.50
11.00
16.00
rRF = 6.0%
rL = 8.5%
rA = rM = 11.0%
rH = 16.0%
H’s Risk
Premium
L’s Risk
Premium
Risk-Free
Return, rRF
Market Risk
Premium, RPM.
Also Stock A’s
Risk Premium
Beta Coe&cient
ri = rRF + RPM(bi)
SML = rRF + RPM x bi
ri
The Security Market Line (SML)
F I G U R E 8! 8
(^23) Long-term Treasury bonds also contain a maturity risk premium, MRP. We include the MRP in r* to simplify the
discussion.