the risky portfolio is still 22%, but its expected rate of return shifts from 15% to 17%.
Thus in both cases the slope increases: from 8/22 to 10/22 for the lending range, and from 6/22 to
Visit us at www
.mhhe.com/bkm
198
P A R T I I
Portfolio Theory and Practice
7. a. The parameters are r
f
5 .07, E ( r
P
) 5 .15, s
P
5 .22. An investor with a degree of risk aversion
A will choose a proportion y in the risky portfolio of
y 5
E(r
P
) 2 r
f
As
P
2
With the assumed parameters and with A 5 3 we find that
y 5
.15 2 .07
3 3 .0484
5 .55
When the degree of risk aversion decreases from the original value of 4 to the new value of 3,
investment in the risky portfolio increases from 41% to 55%. Accordingly, both the expected
return and standard deviation of the optimal portfolio increase:
E(r
C
) 5 .07 1 (.55 3 .08) 5 .114 (before: .1028)
s
C
5 .55 3 .22 5 .121 (before: .0902)
b. All investors whose degree of risk aversion is such that they would hold the risky portfolio in
a proportion equal to 100% or less ( y
≤ 1.00) are lending rather than borrowing, and so are
unaffected by the borrowing rate. The least risk-averse of these investors hold 100% in the
risky portfolio ( y 5 1). We can solve for the degree of risk aversion of these “cut off” investors
from the parameters of the investment opportunities:
y 5 1 5
E(
r
P
) 2 r
f
As
P
2
5
.08
.0484 A
which implies
A 5
.08
.0484
5 1.65
Any investor who is more risk tolerant (that is, A , 1.65) would borrow if the borrowing rate
were 7%. For borrowers,
y 5
E(
r
P
) 2 r
f
B
As
P
2
Suppose, for example, an investor has an A of 1.1. When r
f
5 r
f
B
5 7%, this investor chooses
to invest in the risky portfolio:
y 5
.08
1.1 3 .0484
5 1.50
which means that the investor will borrow an amount equal to 50% of her own investment
capital. Raise the borrowing rate, in this case to
r
f
B
5 9%, and the investor will invest less in
the risky asset. In that case:
y 5
.06
1.1 3 .0484
5 1.13
and “only” 13% of her investment capital will be borrowed. Graphically, the line from r
f
to the
risky portfolio shows the CAL for lenders. The dashed part would be relevant if the borrowing
rate equaled the lending rate. When the borrowing rate exceeds the lending rate, the CAL is
kinked at the point corresponding to the risky portfolio.
The following figure shows indifference curves of two investors. The steeper indifference
curve portrays the more risk-averse investor, who chooses portfolio
C
0
, which involves
lending. This investor’s choice is unaffected by the borrowing rate. The more risk-tolerant
investor is portrayed by the shallower-sloped indifference curves. If the lending rate equaled
the borrowing rate, this investor would choose portfolio C
1
on the dashed part of the CAL.
When the borrowing rate goes up, this investor chooses portfolio
C
2
(in the borrowing range
of the kinked CAL), which involves less borrowing than before. This investor is hurt by the
increase in the borrowing rate.
bod61671_ch06_168-204.indd 198
bod61671_ch06_168-204.indd 198
6/18/13 8:08 PM
6/18/13 8:08 PM
Final PDF to printer
Visit us at www
.mhhe.com/bkm
C H A P T E R
6
Capital Allocation to Risky Assets
199
E(
r)
E(
r
P
)
r
f
C
0
C
2
C
1
r
f
B
s
P
s
8. If all the investment parameters remain unchanged, the only reason for an investor to decrease the
investment proportion in the risky asset is an increase in the degree of risk aversion. If you think
that this is unlikely, then you have to reconsider your faith in your assumptions. Perhaps the S&P
500 is not a good proxy for the optimal risky portfolio. Perhaps investors expect a higher real rate
on T-bills.
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: