Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

Capital allocation line

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
An example capital allocation line. As illustrated by the article, the slope dictates the amount of return that comes with a certain level of risk.

Capital allocation line (CAL) is a graph created by investors to measure the risk of risky and risk-free assets. The graph displays the return to be made by taking on a certain level of risk. Its slope is known as the "reward-to-variability ratio".

Formula

[edit]

The capital allocation line is a straight line that has the following equation:

CAL:E(rC)=rF+σCE(rP)rFσP{\displaystyle \mathrm {CAL} :E(r_{C})=r_{F}+\sigma _{C}{\frac {E(r_{P})-r_{F}}{\sigma _{P}}}}

In this formulaP is the risky portfolio,F is riskless portfolio, andC is a combination of portfoliosP andF.

The slope of the capital allocation line is equal to the incremental return of the portfolio to the incremental increase of risk. Hence, the slope of the capital allocation line is called the reward-to-variability ratio because theexpected return increases continually with the increase of risk as measured by thestandard deviation.[1][better source needed]

Derivation

[edit]

If investors can purchase a risk free asset with some returnrF, then all correctly priced risky assets or portfolios will have expected return of the form

E(RP)=rF+bσP{\displaystyle {E(R_{P})}=r_{F}+b\sigma _{P}}

whereb is some incremental return to offset the risk (sometimes known as arisk premium), and σP is the risk itself expressed as the standard deviation. By rearranging, we can see the risk premium has the following value

b=E(RP)rFσP{\displaystyle b={\frac {E(R_{P})-r_{F}}{\sigma _{P}}}}

Now consider the case of another portfolio that is a combination of a risk free asset and the correctly priced portfolio we considered above (which is itself just another risky asset). If it is correctly priced, it will have exactly the same form:

E(RC)=rF+σCb{\displaystyle E(R_{C})=r_{F}+\sigma _{C}b}

Substituting in our derivation for the risk premium above:

E(RC)=rF+σCE(RP)rFσP{\displaystyle E(R_{C})=r_{F}+\sigma _{C}{\frac {E(R_{P})-r_{F}}{\sigma _{P}}}}

This yields the Capital Allocation Line.[2]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Capital Allocation Between a Risk-Free Asset and a Risky Asset; Capital Allocation Line (CAL)".
  2. ^Sharpe, William (1966)."Mutual Fund Performance"(PDF).The Journal of Business.39 (1, pt 2):119–138.doi:10.1086/294846.
Types ofmarkets
Types ofstocks
Share capital
Participants
Trading venues
Stock valuation
Trading theories
andstrategies
Related terms


This article aboutinvestment is astub. You can help Wikipedia byexpanding it.

Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Capital_allocation_line&oldid=1167335060"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp