Which of the following statements best describes the relationship between asset payoffs and “bad times” events (high inflation, low economic growth, or both)?
A. The higher the expected payoff of an asset in bad times, the higher the asset’s expected return.
B. The higher the expected payoff of an asset in bad times, the lower the asset’s expected return.
C. The expected payoff of an asset in bad times is unrelated to the asset’s expected return, because it depends on investor preferences.
D. The expected payoff of an asset in bad times is unrelated to the asset’s expected return, because arbitrageurs eliminate any expected return potential.
Schweser says the right answer is B. Why?
A. The higher the expected payoff of an asset in bad times, the higher the asset’s expected return.
B. The higher the expected payoff of an asset in bad times, the lower the asset’s expected return.
C. The expected payoff of an asset in bad times is unrelated to the asset’s expected return, because it depends on investor preferences.
D. The expected payoff of an asset in bad times is unrelated to the asset’s expected return, because arbitrageurs eliminate any expected return potential.
Schweser says the right answer is B. Why?