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Subject 1. Portfolio Expected Value and Variance of Return PDF Download

Variance and standard deviation measure the dispersion of a single random variable. Often times, we want to know the relationship between two variables. For example, what is the relationship between the performance of the S&P 500 and that of U.S. long-term corporate bonds? We can use covariance and correlation to measure the degree to which two random variables are related to each other.

Given two random variables, Ri and Rj, the covariance between the two variables is:

Facts about covariance:

  • Covariance of returns is negative if, when the return on one asset is above its expected value, the return on the other asset is below its expected value (an average inverse relationship between returns).
  • Covariance of returns is 0 if returns on the assets are unrelated.
  • Covariance of returns is positive if, when the return on one asset is above its expected value, the return on the other asset is above its expected value (an average positive relationship between returns).
  • The covariance of a random variable with itself (own covariance) is its own variance.

Example

Suppose that the future short-term outlook for the economy is favorable with a probability 0.6 and unfavorable with a probability of 0.4. For two stocks, F and G, returns are 0.25 and 0.2, respectively, in favorable conditions, and 0.01 and 0.02, in unfavorable conditions. Calculate cov (Rf, Rg).

We must firstly calculate the expected value of the return on each stock:
E[Rf] = 0.6 x 0.25 + 0.4 x 0.01 = 0.154
E[Rg] = 0.6 x 0.2 + 0.4 x 0.02 = 0.128

cov (Rf, Rg) = E[{Rf - E(Rf)} x {Rg - E(Rg)}] = 0.6 x [{0.25 - 0.154}x {0.2 - 0.128}] + 0.4 x [{0.01 - 0.154}x {0.02-0.128}] = 0.010368

The fact that the answer is positive indicates that the return on both stocks is above (or below) the expected value at the same time. We know that this is the case because both returns are higher in favorable conditions and lower in unfavorable conditions. Had we obtained a negative answer, logic would have told us that we had made an error somewhere.

The correlation between two random variables, Ri and Rj, is defined as:

Alternative notations are corr(Ri, Rj) and ρij.

Properties of correlation:

  • Correlation is a number between -1 and +1.
  • A correlation of 0 indicates an absence of any linear (straight-line) relationship between the variables.
  • Increasingly positive correlation indicates an increasingly strong positive linear relationship (up to 1, which indicates a perfect linear relationship).
  • Increasingly negative correlation indicates an increasingly strong negative linear relationship (down to -1, which indicates a perfect inverse linear relationship).

The correlation between two variables represents the degree to which these variables are related. It is important to keep in mind that correlation does not necessarily mean causation. For example, there is a high positive relationship between the number of fire-fighters sent to a fire and the amount of damage done. Does this mean that the fire fighters cause the damage? Or is it more likely that the bigger the fire, the more fire fighters are sent and the more damage is done? In this example, the variable "size of the fire" is the causal variable, correlating with both the number of fire-fighters sent and the amount of damage done.

The relationship among covariance, standard deviation, and correlation:

Using the figures from the previous example, we first need to calculate the two standard deviation terms:
Var(Rf) =[{Rf - E(Rf)}2] x P(Rf) = 0.6 x [{0.25-0.154}2] + 0.4 x [{0.01-0.154}2] = 0.013824. Hence, σ(Rf) = 0.117576
Var(Rg) = [{Rg - E(Rg)}2] x P(Rg) = 0.6 x [{0.2-0.128}2] + 0.4 x [{0.02-0.128}2] = 0.007776. Hence, σ(Rg) = 0.088182

Also, we know that cov(Rf,Rg) = 0.010368.

So, correlation = ρ(Rf, Rg)= cov(Rf, Rg) / σ(Rf) x σ(Rg) = 0.010368 / (0.117576 x 0.088182) = 0.99999.
This indicates an almost perfect positive linear relationship between Rf and Rg.

Portfolio Expected Return

The expected return on a portfolio of assets is the market-weighted average of the expected returns on the individual assets in the portfolio. The variance of a portfolio's return consists of two components: the weighted average of the variance for individual assets and the weighted covariance between pairs of individual assets.

σ2(Rp) = w12σ2(R1) + w22σ2(R2) + 2w1w2Cov(R1, R2)

You have a portfolio of two mutual funds, A and B, with 75% invested in A.
E(RA) = 20%; E(RB) = 12%.

Covariance Matrix:

The values on the main diagonal are the variances and the other values are the covariances.

The expected return on the portfolio is:
E(Rp) = wA E(RA) + (1 - wA) E(RB) = 0.75 x 20% + 0.25 x 12% = 18%

The correlation matrix:
σ(RA) = (625)1/2 = 25, σ (RB) = (196)1/2 = 14
ρ(RA, RB) = Cov(RA, RB) / [σ(RA) x σ(RB)] = 120 / (25 x 14) = 0.342857, or 0.34

The variance of the portfolio is:
σ2(RP) = wA2σ2(RA) + wB2σ2(RB) + 2wAwBCov(RA, RB)
= (0.75)2(625) + (0.25)2(196) + 2(0.75)(0.25)(120) = 408.8125

The standard deviation is σ(RP) = (408.8125)1/2 = 20.22%.

It's also possible that you could be given a correlation matrix, which is simply a matrix that shows the correlation between any two assets in the portfolio. Consider the following correlation matrix for assets A, B and C.

Note that the matrix is symmetrical about its main diagonal (top left to bottom right). The entries on this diagonal are all 1, as the correlation between any variable and itself is obviously 1. Similarly, the correlation between RA and RB is 0.53, the correlation between RA and RC is 0.78, and the correlation between RB and RC is 0.6.

The steps that would now be involved would be:

  • Calculate expected values and variances for the return on each asset.
  • Square-root your variances in each case to get standard deviations.
  • Use the standard deviations together with the correlations from the matrix above to calculate covariances using the link formula.
  • Calculate the values of the portfolio weights.
  • Now calculate E(Rp) and Var(Rp) using the above formula.

Essentially, the processes are the same. In each case, we need to obtain expected values, variances and covariances, in order to calculate E(Rp) and Var(Rp). How we obtain them depends on how the data are presented to us.

Familiarize yourself with the two different types of matrices, as explained in this section, and know what each term represents in each covariance formula.

User Contributed Comments 5

User Comment
achu As an alternate method / aside, Cov(F,G) ALSO equals E(FG) - E(F) E(G). In given example, E(FG) equals .6 * (Prob F&G in favorabl economy = .25*.2) PLUS .4 * (Prob F&G in bad economy= .01*.02) = .03008. Cov(F,G) = .03008 - (.154)(.128) = .010368 as above.
aakash1108 Thanks @ achu!
jpducros Questions 5 and 6 in this session are interesting and could help save you some time...
somebody Not understand: why E (Rf)= 0.6 * 0.25 + 0.4 * 0.01
Why not 0.6 * 0.25 + 0.4 * 0.25 + 0.01 * 0.25 + 0.02 * 0.25
Olesya_CFA Somebody, the formula for expected return is probability weighted average of possible outcomes. Probabilities in our case are 0.6 and 0.4. Possible outcomes: for stock F - 0.25 and 0.01 in favorable and unfavorable condition, for stock G - 0.2 and 0.02 accordingly. You have to calculate expected return for the stock F separately from the stock G. That is why your suggestion is irrelevant - you mix the stocks in one formula. It should not happen.
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I am using your study notes and I know of at least 5 other friends of mine who used it and passed the exam last Dec. Keep up your great work!
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