Risk Premium

ckyeh

New Member
Dear David:
On webnair 2010-8-a-Investment, page 5:
E{Rn}=1+iF+βn*μB+βn*ΔfB+αn
βn*μB is Risk Premium.

And On webnair 2010-7-a-Operational, page 18:
Equity risk premium (ERP) = 5%
equity beta = 1.2
Riskless rate = 4%, Market return = 9%.
So I concluded:
Equity risk premium (ERP) = equity beta*{ Market return- Riskless rate}
5%=1.2*{9%-4%}=6% ???
Do we need to put ALPHA here? So Alpha=-1%?
Then 5%=-1% +1.2*{9%-4%}

But If we do so, 5%couldn’t be the Equity risk premium, right?
Because based on the definition of Equity risk premium:
The excess return that an individual stock or the overall stock market provides over a risk-free rate.
Equity risk premium = { Equity return- Riskless rate}=equity beta*{ Market return- Riskless rate}
Compared to webnair 2010-8-a-Investment, page 5:
E{Rn}=1+iF+βn*μB+βn*ΔfB+αn
βn*μB is Risk Premium, right? The meaning of { Equity return- Riskless rate}、equity beta*{ Market return- Riskless rate} andβn*μB seems all the same, right?

Thanks for your help!
 

David Harper CFA FRM

David Harper CFA FRM
Subscriber
Hi ckyeh,

In regard to RAROC (p 18 of 7a), the ERP (aka, market risk premium) of 5% is just the 9% - 4%.
Note this is incorrect: Equity risk premium (ERP) = equity beta*{ Market return- Riskless rate}
Rather: ERP = { Market return- Riskless rate}, such that
CAPM says: excess return (i) = beta*ERP
Alpha does not need to enter except it may implicitly impact the 11% RAROC; e.g., please note:
ARAROC = (RAROC - Rf)/beta and project passes if ARAROC > ERP
(RAROC - Rf)/beta > ERP, such that
(RAROC - Rf) > ERP * beta, and
RAROC > Rf + ERP * beta
… note similarity to CAPM/Jensen's alpha: pass the project if it returns equal to our better than implied by its beta

You are absolutely correct to draw a line to Grinold. As you know, he is basically generalizing the CAPM into APT. In this case.
E{Rn}=1+iF+βn*μB+βn*ΔfB+αn, is equal to:
E{Rn}=1+iF+βn*(μB+ΔfB) +αn

And this is analogous to CAPM:
E(R) = riskfree rate + beta*ERP
… where (i) is his "time premium" = riskfree rate
… beta matches βn as factor EXPOSURE
… and the CAPM matches/parses into a long-term risk premium + short-term variation (whereas CAPM is single-period and does not make room for a short- versus long-run difference)

So, when you say, "μB is Risk Premium, right?" that is absolutely correct, only Grinold has "broken out" the long-run ERP/MRP, then added another "exceptional" term for short-run variation

David
 
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