Chap 4 - Risk, return, opportunity cost
IV. INTRODUCTION TO RISK, RETURN, AND THE OPPORTUNITY COST
1 General Concepts
Risk and risk management
Definitions
Risk
is defined as the effect of uncertainty on objectives
can come from
uncertainty in financial markets,
project failures,
legal liabilities,
credit risk,
accidents,
natural causes
disasters
deliberate attacks from an adversary
Risk management
is the process of measuring risk and then developing and implementing strategies to manage that risk
can be considered
the identification, assessment, and prioritization of risks followed by coordinated
economical application of resources to minimize, monitor, and control the probability and/or impact of unfortunate events or to maximize the realization of opportunities
faces difficulties in allocating resources.
This is the idea of opportunity cost.
Resources spent on risk management could have been spent on more profitable activities.
Again, ideal risk management minimizes spending and minimizes the negative effects of risks.
In ideal risk management, a prioritization process is followed whereby
the risks with the greatest loss and the greatest probability of occurring are handled first,
risks with lower probability of occurrence and lower loss are handled in descending order
In practice, the prioritization process can be very difficult
balancing between risks with a high probability of occurrence but lower loss versus a risk with high loss but lower probability of occurrence can often be mishandled.
Intangible risk management identifies a new type of a risk
that has a 100% probability of occurring
but is ignored by the organization due to a lack of identification ability
These risks directly reduce
the productivity of knowledge workers,
decrease cost effectiveness,
profitability,
service,
quality,
reputation,
brand value,
earnings quality
Intangible risk management allows risk management to create immediate value from the identification and reduction of risks that reduce productivity.
Principles of risk management
consist of the following elements
1. identify, characterize, and assess threats
2. assess the vulnerability of critical assets to specific threats
3. determine the risk (i.e. the expected consequences of specific types of attacks on specific assets)
4. identify ways to reduce those risks
5. prioritize risk reduction measures based on a strategy
Risk management should:
· create value.
· be an integral part of organizational processes.
· be part of decision making.
· explicitly address uncertainty.
· be systematic and structured.
· be based on the best available information.
· be tailored.
· take into account human factors.
· be transparent and inclusive.
· be dynamic, iterative and responsive to change.
be capable of continual improvement and enhancement.
Assessment
Once risks have been identified, they must then be assessed as
to their potential severity of loss
to the probability of occurrence
These quantities can be
either simple to measure, in the case of the value of a lost building,
or impossible to know for sure in the case of the probability of an unlikely event occurring
in the assessment process
it is critical to make the best educated guesses possible in order to properly prioritize the implementation of the risk management plan
Potential risk treatments
Once risks have been identified and assessed, all techniques to manage the risk fall into one or more of these four major categories:
· Avoidance (eliminate, withdraw from or not become involved)
· Reduction (optimise - mitigate)
Retention (accept and budget)
· Sharing (transfer - outsource or insure)
Financial risk management
focuses on
risks that can be managed using traded financial instruments
changes in commodity prices; interest rates, foreign exchange rates and stock prices
will also play an important role in cash management
This area is related to corporate finance in two ways
1. firm exposure to business risk is a direct result of previous Investment and Financing decisions
2. both disciplines share the goal of enhancing, or preserving, firm value.
All large corporations have risk management teams, and small firms practice informal risk management
Derivatives are the instruments most commonly used in financial risk management. Because
unique derivative contracts tend to be costly to create and monitor,
the most cost-effective financial risk management methods usually involve derivatives that trade on well-established financial markets.
These standard derivative instruments include options, future contracts, forward contracts, and swaps.
There are several types of financial risk management such as
financial engineering,
financial risk,
credit risk,
interest rate risk,
liquidity risk,
market risk,
operational risk,
volatility risk,
settlement risk.
Each type of risk has its own methods to mitigate their risks.
Rate of Return: A Review
The percentage return also can be expressed as the sum of the dividend yield and capital gains yield.
Percentage return = (Capital gain + dividend)/Initial share price
The dividend yield is the dividend expressed as a percentage of the stock price at the beginning of the year
Dividend yield = Dividend /Initial share price
the capital gains yield is the capital gain expressed as a percentage of the stock price at the beginning of the year:
Capital gain yield = Capital gain/ Initial share price
Thus the total return is the sum of the dividend yield and capital gains yield
There is a distinction between the nominal rate of return and the real rate of return
The nominal return measures how much money you will have at the end of the year if you invest today.
The real rate of return tells you how much more you will be able to buy with your money at the end of the year
To convert from a nominal to a real rate of return, we use the following relationship:
1 + real rate of return = (1 + nominal rate of return )/(1 + inflation rate)
There is a distinction between the nominal rate of return and the real rate of return.
The nominal return measures how much money you will have at the end of the year if you invest today.
The real rate of return tells you how much more you will be able to buy with your money at the end of the year.
To convert from a nominal to a real rate of return, we use the following relationship:
1 + real rate of return = (1 + nominal rate of return) / (1 + inflation rate)
2 Measuring Risk
Variance and Standard Deviation
Common stocks have been risky investments. They will almost certainly continue to be risky investments.
Investment risk depends on the dispersion or spread of possible outcomes.
The financial manager needs a numerical measure of dispersion.
The standard measures are variance and standard deviation.
More variable returns imply greater investment risk.
This suggests that some measure of dispersion will provide a reasonable measure of risk,
and dispersion is precisely what is measured by variance and standard deviation.
Expected return = Probability - weighted average of possible outcomes
Variance = average of squared deviations around the average
Standard deviation = square root of variance
Measuring the Variation in Stock Returns
When estimating the spread of possible outcomes from investing in the stock market,
most financial analysts start by assuming that the spread of returns in the past is a reasonable indication of what could happen in the future.
Therefore, they calculate the standard deviation of past returns.
To illustrate, suppose that you were presented with the data for stock market returns shown in Table 6.2.
3 Risk and Diversification
Diversification
We can calculate our measures of variability equally well for individual securities in portfolios of securities.
diversification reduces variability.
By diversifying your investment across the two businesses you make an average level of profit come rain or shine
Portfolio diversification works because prices of different stocks do not move exactly together
Diversification works best when the returns are negatively correlated, as in the case for our umbrella and ice cream businesses
Asset versus Portfolio Risk
Market Risk versus Unique Risk
Thinking about Risk
Message 1 Some risk look big and dangerous but are diversifiable
Message 2 Market risks are macrorisks
Message 3 Risk can be measured
For Class Discussion
Special Terms
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