You are on page 1of 15

Arbitrage Pricing Theory

Chap 9 of Reilly and Brown and Chap. Of Prasanna Chandra

Limitations of CAPM
The CAPM has been one of the most usefuland frequently used- financial theories ever developed. Still, the model has some deficiencies Some tests of CAPM indicated that the beta for individual securities were not stable, but portfolio betas were stable (with some conditions)

Limitations of CAPM
Some studies find that firms give more return than suggested with beta, for example low P/E firms give more return than high P/E firms after adjusting for risk as measured by beta
High book-to-market price ratio firms generated more return than low book-to-market price ratio firms

In efficient markets such return differential should not exist

Limitations cont..
The explanations of such difference could be:
Either the markets are not efficient Or the model (CAPM) that predicts such returns is not accurate

Markets are efficient in the long run, as suggested by number of studies, so the only logical conclusion is : CAPM is not accurate.

Limitations cont
The CAPM captures only one form of risk, i.e. systematic risk in terms of Beta CAPM is based on many assumptions which are not true in practical life
To overcome these limitations, Stephen Ross developed Arbitrage Pricing Theory (APT) which requires less assumptions and it allows multiple risk factors

Assumptions of APT
Capital markets are perfectly competitive Investors always prefer more wealth to less wealth with certainty The stochastic process generating asset returns can be expressed as a linear function of a set of K risk factors (or indices)

APT- Return generating Process


The APT assumes that the return on asset is linearly related to a set of risk factors as shown below:
Ri is the actual return on asset i during a specific time period (i=1,2,n) E(Ri) is expected return on asset i if all the risk factors have zero changes bij is the sensitivities of asset is return to the common risk factor j j is a set of common factors, with a zero mean, that influences the return on all assets ei is the random error term (a unique effect on is return)

APT- cont
j are multiple risk factors expected to have an impact on the returns of all assets. For example: GDP, inflation, political upheavals, change in interest rate etc APT considers these all factors that may have impact on return compared to CAPM which considers only covariance of the asset with market portfolio (beta)

APT- cont
Given those common factors, i.e. , the bij determine how each asset reacts to the jth particular common factor For example: Interest rate change will affect all securities in the economy, but some securities (like banking stocks) will have more impact than other securities (like FMCG stocks)

APT- Equilibrium risk-return relationship


APT requires that in equilibrium the return on a zeroinvestment, zero-systematic risk portfolio is zero when the unique effects (i) are diversified away [this is the basic concept of arbitrage)
The key idea that guides the development of equilibrium riskreturn relationship is the law of one price which says that two identical things cannot sell at different prices Similarly, two portfolios having same risk, cannot offer different returns If they offer so, arbitrageurs will step in and one price will be established

This assumption implies that the expected return on any asset i can be expressed as

APT-cont
Where: 0= the expected return on an asset with zero systematic risk j= the risk premium related to the jth common risk factor, j bij= the pricing relationship between the risk premium and the asset; or the responsiveness of the asset i to the jth common factor

Comparing APT and CAPM


CAPM Form of equation Number of risk factors Factor risk premium Factor risk sensitivity Zero beta return (when no systematic risk is present) Linear 1 E(Rm) Rf j Rf APT Linear K1 j Bij 0

Example 1
Consider the following data for two risk factors (1 and 2) and two securities (J and L):
0= 0.05 1=0.02 2=0.04 bJ1=0.8 bJ2=1.40 bL1=1.6 bL2=2.25

Compute the expected return for both the securities, Suppose that J is priced at $22.50 while L is at $15.00. It is expected that both securities with pay $0.75 as dividend. What is the expected price of both the securities? Suppose, somehow you know that after one year price of J will be $24 and L will be $17. How can you benefit from the situation?

Example 2
Consider the following data for two stocks D and E and two risk factors 1 and 2

Stock D E

bi1 1.2 2.6

bi2 3.4 2.6

E(Ri) 13.1% 15.4%

a. Assuming that the risk free rate is 5%, calculate the levels of the factor risk premia that are consistent with the reported values for the factor betas and the expected returns for the two stocks. b. You expect that in one year the prices for stock D and E will be $55 and $36 respectively. Also, neither stock is expected to pay a dividend over the next year.

What should the price of each stock be today to be consistent with the expected rate of return levels given? c. Suppose now that the risk premium for Factor 1 that you calculated in part a suddenly increases by 0.25%. What are the new expected returns for stocks D and E? d. If the increase in the Factor 1 risk premium in Part c does not cause you to change your opinion about what the stock price be in one year, what adjustment be necessary in the current price?

Example 3
Suppose that three stocks (A, B and C) and two common risk factors (1 and 2) have the following relationship:
a. If 1=4% and 2=2%, what are the prices expected next year for each of the stocks? Assume that all three stocks currently sell for $30 and will not pay a dividend in the next year b. Suppose you know that next year the prices for stock A, B and C will actually be $31.50, $35.00 and $30.50. Create and demonstrate a riskless, arbitrage investment to take advantage of these mispriced securities. What is the profit from your investment?

You might also like