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Principles of Finance: Unit 6, Variance and Co-Variance 5 Views
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Description:
Everything you've ever wanted to know about variance and covariance, but were too afraid to ask.
Transcript
- 00:00
Principles of finance ah la shmoop variants and co variance
- 00:06
will human beings like to live in a calm financial
- 00:08
world We seek relatively low variability in our daily lives
- 00:13
least when it comes to our pension or retirement money
- 00:15
We've invested it's a lot of stress not knowing where
Full Transcript
- 00:19
your rent money is coming from or if you'll be
- 00:21
able to feed your kids next month or if you'll
- 00:24
finally be able to buy a new car window to
- 00:26
replace that patchwork of duct tape So predictability in cash
- 00:30
flows and cash coming to you and reliability in your
- 00:34
long term retirement The quality of life you lead Yeah
- 00:37
that carries a big premium in our society We generally
- 00:40
want to mollify volatility And if we're thinking about our
- 00:43
personal investments well then we want good long term investments
- 00:47
But one who's variations offset one another at least a
- 00:51
little bit Well what does all this mean Well think
- 00:53
about a tiny tale of two industries the legal drug
- 00:57
industry and the washer dryer industry Vastly different characteristics here
- 01:02
But each industry is needed and it has a decent
- 01:05
place to exist for an investor for a long time
- 01:08
And there are good companies in each area worth owning
- 01:11
like what are the odds We still have colds and
- 01:14
dirty clothes in twenty years You know pretty good wealthy
- 01:17
economy generally goes long and its gentle booms and busts
- 01:21
over seven a ten year cycles ish that boom and
- 01:23
bust cycle greatly effects when people choose upgrade to a
- 01:28
new washing machine when times were good while they spend
- 01:31
the dough they buy when times are bad while they
- 01:33
just fix their old machine or try to find a
- 01:36
water polo player stomach to you know do the wash
- 01:38
on manually But when people are sick well they don't
- 01:41
care what the economy is doing They want the drugs
- 01:44
pain other than in certain video studios in van nuys
- 01:47
california is not optional They will pay up in good
- 01:50
times or bad for those legal drugs so drugs are
- 01:53
generally a steady state business good economy or bad they
- 01:57
grow up whatever percent per year they're going to grow
- 02:00
in the act more or less independently of what the
- 02:02
economy is doing So a portfolio that includes investments in
- 02:06
a drug company it's kind of stabilized by it it
- 02:09
just grows along at some modest percentage each year and
- 02:12
it doesn't have awesome years like the washing machine company
- 02:15
and it doesn't have terrible years like the washing machine
- 02:18
company just kind of goes along stabilize it But what
- 02:20
about a hedge What would be a direct opposite or
- 02:24
variant of washing machines Like what does well in a
- 02:28
bad economy Well how about a grocery couponing company Yeah
- 02:32
when times get tough people pay more attention to clipping
- 02:35
coupons to save money at the grocery store and that
- 02:38
business often booms when times are bad So the coupons
- 02:41
company is a co variant of the washing machine company
- 02:45
and note that all of these companies can be equally
- 02:48
good long term investments it's more about the long and
- 02:51
winding nous of the road that they travel to eventually
- 02:55
get there Five dollar word alert coefficient of variation Well
- 02:59
we have myriad choices in a portfolio we can put
- 03:02
together when we're investing and we'd better get on this
- 03:04
because loving rich old uncle ari is coughing a lot
- 03:07
more lately than he did six months ago Yeah we
- 03:11
may have big portfolios coming our way to build soon
- 03:14
We have a tool to help us figure out the
- 03:16
next level of granularity in the investment portfolio we're assembling
- 03:20
It's called the coefficient of variation and it maps the
- 03:23
amount of risk we took to produce a given investing
- 03:26
performance For example if we bought five dollars worth of
- 03:29
lottery tickets at seven eleven and we want one hundred
- 03:32
million dollars well what does that mean Well yes it's
- 03:34
great that we want We're gonna go shopping for yachts
- 03:37
and maybe a jet But didn't we take an insane
- 03:40
amount of risk to produce that lottery winning ticket like
- 03:43
it was one in a billion odds tto win and
- 03:46
we got that one in twenty million hitter there Yeah
- 03:49
well just because you're now rich does that really mean
- 03:51
you know what you're doing Is an investor Well financial
- 03:54
journalists will think so they'll talk about what a great
- 03:57
lottery picker you are because well you know history and
- 03:59
journalism is written by the wind right But really investors
- 04:03
will likely question your wisdom while they're separately lauding your
- 04:07
luck and leaving you to pick up the dinner check
- 04:09
and think about that we had like a one in
- 04:12
a billion chance of winning that lottery ticket So in
- 04:14
theory that five dollars quote investment unquote should have produced
- 04:18
a win of five billion dollars to simply equal the
- 04:22
odds but we only won one hundred million dollars in
- 04:25
the risk reward scenario didn't make any sense but we
- 04:28
did it and we want are we smart No lucky
- 04:31
ludicrously like insanely lucky so our coefficient here would be
- 04:35
extremely hi mathematically the coefficient of variation is just a
- 04:39
standard deviation divided by the expected return that thing remember
- 04:43
our rap album example versus just buying an index fund
- 04:47
You know if you don't go back and watch that
- 04:48
video please given almost the same expected returns we'll hopefully
- 04:52
the clarity obviousness of just investing in the index fund
- 04:56
is easy way better than the rap album for our
- 04:59
purposes here let's just ignore the details and how we
- 05:01
calculate the nitty and the gritty of standard deviation contextually
- 05:05
in a variety of portfolios and just cut to the
- 05:07
big idea here How to calculate the coefficient of variation
- 05:11
so you haven't expected return of ten percent from the
- 05:13
rap album with standard deviation of thirty percent i eat
- 05:17
lots of beta or volatility and potential outcomes like it
- 05:21
could go bankrupt and give you zero Or you might
- 05:23
make five times your money or a five hundred percent
- 05:25
return And in the index fund scenario you have expected
- 05:28
return of ten percent with standard deviation of only ten
- 05:31
percent So the coefficient of variation in the rap album
- 05:35
scenario is point three divided by point one or three
- 05:38
And the coefficient of variation in the index fund scenario
- 05:41
is point One divided by point once was just one
- 05:44
night Well easy choice now illustrated for you Mathematically at
- 05:47
no extra charge You go with the index fund and
- 05:50
you buy your self esteem enhancements with the cash you
- 05:53
save And maybe then you could just buy the rap
- 05:56
album on itunes instead and feel good about all that
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