Why do people take risk? For bungee jumpers: just to feel alive, by feeling close to death. For investors: because big profits come with big risks (when they do well). The more you can stand to risk, the more you can stand to make...or lose.
A risk curve shows the tradeoffs between taking on risk and assets. Think of investment returns, or whatever payoff value, on the y-axis. The x-axis is cumulative probability of risk—basically, a scale between 0% and 100% of risk. The greater the risk, the greater the average returns could be, so the risk curve slopes upward. You could get a low-risk, short-term bond, which would curve toward the bottom-left: low risk = low gains. Or you could buy some shares of a risky startup, which would be high and to the right: high risk = high potential gains.
The risk curves lives in the home of Modern Portfolio Theory (MPT), which aims to maximize returns while minimizing risk. MPT relies on the risk curve to show investors potential benefits across the efficient frontier, getting the most bang for your buck.
Risk curves are hard to make accurately, since we’re only speculating on how risky something is. We don’t actually know if it was risky or not until something happens...or doesn’t. Historical standard deviation helps figure out what a reasonable assumption of risk could be for a given investment though.
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Finance: What is risk premium?0 Views
Finance Allah shmoop What is risk premium No it's not
This movie in three D risk premium comes from the
notion that when you invest in pretty much anything other
than US government debt there is more risk in that
other investment like even by the bonds of Disney or
Coke or GOOG or some other behemoth company of those
bonds carry more risk than US government paper And if
you bought the stocks I even equities not the bonds
of one of those beam off cos Well there's way
more risk Well historically stocks have swung up and down
violently in short periods over time but over long periods
of time they've gone up Ah lot Well regardless where
there is more perceived risk investors will demand more potential
reward Yeah the key idea here every investment carries more
risk than US government paper So on top of whatever
U S Government bonds air yielding investors tag on top
of them a premium investment return that they require to
be interested in investing So if say a five year
U S Government bond is yielding three percent and you're
looking at investing in bonds backed by a controversial low
warlord Somalian company Well there's at least some tangible risk
of bankruptcy there right Well then those bonds will carry
meaningful E a higher yield than the US government five
year paper If the risk that the company doesn't pay
back its bond is modest well then maybe that premiums
only one percent on top and those five year bonds
yield in a four percent If the risk is big
they might have to yield eight or ten or fourteen
percent or more But those were extremely high rates at
least these days The market's telling you that the company
and backing the money already has one foot in the
grave So now let's go to a completely different way
of thinking about this extra risk your local diner Think
of our risk free five year U S Government bonds
of yielding three percent and being priced like a dinner
salad which is the cheapest item on the menu right
here So everything else will cost more than that salad
crew tones included So then when you're ordering if you
wanted a burger it's total gross Cost is seven bucks
But you could also describe that cost to the angry
waitress or friendly robot as dinner salad plus four bucks
The premium tacked onto the salad price is four dollars
for the burger Well risk is priced and described the
same way there has to be added investment return to
reflect the added risk to the investor on any given
deal Be careful though There's inherent risk even if all
you do is order to the salad Especially if there's
been a romaine lettuce E Coli warning recently issued by
the CDC And you do not want to go there 00:02:32.288 --> [endTime] My God
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