Monday, March 19, 2012

CAPM: The first factor of investing | Aspen Daily News Online

A group of our advisors attended a conference this past fall sponsored by Dimensional Fund Advisors. In his talk, ?Risk Dimensions of the Market,? Eugene F. Fama reviewed the latest data on the Fama-French three-factor model for investment returns.

Modeling investment returns seeks to find an equation to predict your expected returns as much as possible. The simplest equation for the markets would be ?Return equals 11.71 percent.? This has been the average return from 1927 through 2010, the zero factor model. Put your money in the market, and you will get, on average, 11.71 percent annually.

The one-factor model, called the capital asset pricing model (CAPM), was developed in the early 1960s. William Sharpe, Harry Markowitz and Merton Miller won the Nobel Prize in economics for this work. CAPM adds a single factor to the equation: risk as measured by standard deviation.

CAPM claims that the riskier the stock, the greater its expected return. Historical analysis provides evidence of how much. The CAPM formula says that the 11.71-percent returns of the market are actually a risk-free return of 3.67 percent plus a premium of 8.04 percent that investors require to take the risks in an inherently volatile stock market.

CAPM goes on to state that although the average premium for investing in the market is 8.04 percent, the premium is higher on more volatile stocks and lower on less volatile stocks. In other words, investors demand and receive a higher expected return for more volatile stocks. The sensitivity of a stock to market volatility is called ?beta.?

The beta of a stock measures the likely movement of a specific investment against the actual movement of the market. If the x-axis is the movement of the market and the y-axis is the movement of a specific investment, a line can be graphed of the average for all the movements of the market and the corresponding movements of a specific investment. The formula for the expected return of an investment is the risk-free return plus the stock?s beta times the risk premium.

For example, a stock with a beta of 2.0 will go up twice the market premium when the stock market goes up. But it will go down twice as much when the market goes down. Because the market generally trends upward, this stock has a higher expected return. A stock with a beta of only 0.5 will be less volatile but also have a lower expected return.

Individual stocks do not follow these trends exactly. They are only aggregate trends. The more heavily diversified you are and the longer you are invested in the markets, the more your experience will coincide with market averages. But the general idea that systematic risk and average return go together is the important lesson for investing.

Three caveats to note: Systematic risk is undiversifiable market risk. Many investment schemes involve specific risks that can and should be avoided. Also, typically the market is measured by the S&P 500, which ignores the fact that this index only represents a portion of the investable markets. Finally, your experience of market returns is diminished by the fees and expenses of your investment vehicles. Hidden costs are often a significant drag on your specific portfolio investments.

There is no such thing as a safe investment that pays market rates of return. Safe investments average 3.67 percent annually. If you want the other 8.04 percent, you must be willing to put your money at risk. You can and should be prudent, but there is no guarantee that you will get all your money back. The general principle is that risk follows return.

CAPM is the one-factor model for investment returns. Next week we will add two more factors that help explain more of the variance of specific investments against general market returns. In the meantime, we learn from CAPM that the markets are inherently volatile but also very profitable. Historically, the market has paid a premium for risk. And although we cannot avoid systemic risk, we can steer clear of specific risks and high fees and expenses.

David John Marotta is President of Marotta Wealth Management, Inc. of Charlottesville providing fee-only financial planning and wealth management at www.emarotta.com and blogging at www.marottaonmoney.com. Questions to be answered in the column should be sent to questions@emarotta.com or Marotta Wealth Management, Inc., One Village Green Circle, Suite 100, Charlottesville, VA 22903-4619.

Source: http://www.aspendailynews.com/section/home/152358

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