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Unit 4: Risk and Return Analysis




               The stage of the industry's life cycle, international tariffs and/or quotas on the products  Notes
               produced by an industry, product/industry related taxes (e.g. cigarettes), industry-wide
               labour union problems, environmental restrictions, raw material availability, and similar
               factors interact with and affect all the firms in an industry simultaneously. As a result of
               these common features, the prices of the securities issued by the competing firms tend to
               rise and fall together.
          These risk factors do not make up an exhaustive list, but are merely representative of the major
          classifications involved. All the uncertainties taken together make up the total risk, or the total
          variability of return.

          Self Assessment

          Fill in the blanks:
          1.   ……………. is the risk for the market as a whole.

          2.   ……………risk is sometimes used synonymously with systematic risk.
          3.   Every investment involves ……………. that make future investments returns risk-prone.

          4.2 Measurement of Risk


          4.2.1 Volatility

          Of all the ways to describe risk, the simplest and possibly most accurate is "the uncertainty of a
          future outcome." The anticipated return for some future period is known as the expected return.
          The actual return over some past period is known as the realized return. The simple fact that
          dominates investing is that the realized return on an asset with any risk attached to it may be
          different from what  was expected. Volatility may  be described as the  range of  movement
          (or price fluctuation) from the expected level of return.


                 Example: The more a stock goes up and down in price, the more volatile that stock is.
          Because wide price swings create more uncertainty of an eventual outcome, increased volatility
          can be equated with increased risk. Being able to measure and determine the past volatility of a
          security is important in that it provides some insight into the riskiness of that security as an
          investment.

          4.2.2 Standard Deviation

          Investors and analysts should be at least somewhat familiar  with the  study of  probability
          distributions. Since the return an investor will earn from  investing is not known, it must be
          estimated. An investor may expect the TR (Total Return) on a particular security to be 10% for
          the coming year, but in truth this is only a "point estimate."

          4.2.3 Probability Distributions

          To deal with the uncertainty of returns, investors need to think explicitly about a security's
          distribution of probable TRs. In other words, investors need to keep in mind that, although they
          may expect a security to return 10%, for example, this is only a one-point estimate of the entire
          range of possibilities. Given that investors must deal with the uncertain future, a number of
          possible returns can, and will, occur.





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