Essentials Of Investments
11th Edition
ISBN: 9781260013924
Author: Bodie, Zvi, Kane, Alex, MARCUS, Alan J.
Publisher: Mcgraw-hill Education,
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Stock A has an expected return of 5% and a beta of .7. Stock B has an expected return of 9% and a beta of 1.4. If a portfolio of the two assets has a beta of 1.12, what percentage of funds is invested in Stock B?
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- Suppose that a mutual fund manager has a $20 million portfolio with a beta of 1.2. Also suppose that the risk free rate is 4.5% and the market risk premium is 6%. The manager expects to receive an additional $5 million, which is to be invested in a number of new stocks to add to the portfolio. After these stocks are added, the manager would like the fund's required rate of return to be 10.5%. For notation, let r represent the required return, let RF represent the risk free rate, let b represent the beta of a group of stocks, and T'm represent the market return. According to the video, which equation most closely describes the security market line (SML)? Or=TRF-bx (TM - TRF) Ⓒr=TRF+b× (™M - TRF) b ○ r = TRF + TM-TRF Or=rRF+bx (M+TRF) Hint: Recall that the manager wants the new required rate of return for the portfolio to remain at 10.5%. Using the equation you just identified, and plugging in the relevant information, yields a beta of the portfolio, after the new stocks have been added,…arrow_forwardExpected return of a portfolio using beta. The beta of four stocks-P, Q, R, and S-are 0.59, 0.89, 1.05, and 1.31, respectively and the beta of portfolio 1 is 0.96, the beta of portfolio 2 is 0.87, and the beta of portfolio 3 is 1.05. What are the expected returns of each of the four individual assets and the three portfolios if the current SML is plotted with an intercept of 4.5% (risk-free rate) and a market premium of 12.0% (slope of the line)? ..... What is the expected return of stock P? % (Round to two decimal places.)arrow_forwardStock A has an expected return of 13.52 percent. Stock B has an expected return of 9.24 percent. Assuming the Capital Asset Pricing Model holds, and Stock A's beta is greater than Stock B's beta by 0.32, what is the expected market risk premium (in percent)? Answer to two decimalsarrow_forward
- Parts A-C have already been answered, looking for answer D.arrow_forwardYou have a portfolio that is equally invested in Stock F with a beta of 1.09, Stock G with a beta of 1.46, and the market. What is the beta of your portfolio?arrow_forwardStock X has a beta of 1.15 and an expected return of 11.1 percent. Stock Y has a beta of 1.2 and an expected return of 11.5 percent. What is the risk - free rate of return assuming that both stock X and stock Y are correctly priced?arrow_forward
- Consider a portfolio with stocks A, B, and C. The total value of the portfolio is $245,000 and it is fully invested in these 3 stocks. $85,653 is invested in A and $69,552 is invested in B. The Betas of stocks A, B, and C are 1.2, .8, and 1.62, respectively. What is the Beta of the portfolio overall?arrow_forwardAn investor aims to build a portfolio with annual return equal to 8.88%. In the market only two stocks (A and B) are available, with annual historical returns equal to 9.6% and 7.8% respectively. Assume future returns have the same distribution of past returns. What is the percentage of funds that the investor must allocate to the stock A and B?arrow_forwardStock A has expected return of 15% and standard deviation (s.d.) 20%. Stock B has expected return 20% and s.d. 15%. The two stocks have a correlation coefficient of 0.5. 1.Note that Stock A has greater risk (s.d.) that Stock B, but a lower expected return. Explain how is this possible in a world where returns on assets are as predicted by the CAPM. 2. Determine the expected return and the s.d. of portfolio P1, composed by investing 30% in stock A and 70% in stock B. 3. Consider stock C that has expected return 15% and s.d. 15%. Stock C is uncorrelated with either stock A and stock B. Determine the expected return and s.d. of portfolio P2 made by investing 50% in stock C and 50% in portfolio P1.arrow_forward
- 1. A stock has a beta of 1.15 and an expected return of 14 percent. A risk-free asset Currently earns 4.2 percent. a . What is expected return on a portfolio that is equally in inverted assets? b. if portfolio of the two assets has beta of 75, what are the portfolio weights? C. if a portfolio of the two assets has an expected return of 8 percent .what is its beta? the twoarrow_forwardYou have a portfolio consisting solely of stock A and stock B. The portfolio has an expected return of 10.6% stock A has an expected return of 12.4%. Stock B is expected to return 6.6%. What is the portfolio weight of stock A?arrow_forwardAssume you wish to hold a portfolio consisting of Loblaw stock and a riskless asset. Given the following information, calculate portfolio expected returns and portfolio betas, letting the proportion of funds invested in Loblaw range from 0 to 125% Loblaw has a beta (\ beta) of 1.2 and an expected return of 18% Risk-free rate is 7%. Loblaw weights: 0%, 25%, 50%, 75%, 100%arrow_forward
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