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CAPM came under a lot of scrutiny and attack as its simplicity also led to extensive testing which did not bear out the conclusions. This paper seeks to re-think CAPM in light of the broader trend in the institutional world to implement Liability Driven Investments (LDI) to see if this can help...
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Investment managers require a consistent asset pricing model, asset allocation recommendations and risk-adjusted performance measures (or the “three facets of investing”) to be effective in managing portfolios. Incorporating three critical realities of investing into these models (i.e., that...
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The Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM) has been the backbone of asset market finance even though many academic studies have revealed its limitations, both theoretical and empirical. This paper argues that including liability or benchmark considerations in investment decisions may provide a...
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Investors live in a multi-period, volatile world and base their decisions on theories of asset pricing, and asset allocation, often derived from a single period model. They make assumptions about asset returns and volatilities and use optimizers to set their long term allocations, and often...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10012971837
This paper makes a simple but bold argument that because mean-variance optimization (MVO) and the capital asset pricing model (CAPM) were derived from a theoretical construct rather than reality, they represent a specialized case of a more general theory. We suggest a theory based on the...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10013009412
Prof, Andre Perold has shown how the Capital Asset Pricing Model (with implications for asset pricing and risk-adjusted performance) can be derived from maximizing the Sharpe ratio as opposed to the traditional approach of assuming that investors maximize the utility of wealth. More recently,...
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