When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Equity premium puzzle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Equity_premium_puzzle

    Over time, as well as to determine the factors driving equity premium in various countries / regions may still be active research agenda. [13] A 2023 paper by Edward McQuarrie argues the equity risk premium may not exist, at least not as is commonly understood, and is furthermore based on data from a too narrow a time period in the late 20th ...

  3. Aswath Damodaran - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aswath_Damodaran

    Aswath Damodaran (born 24 September 1957), [1] is a Professor of Finance at the Stern School of Business at New York University (Kerschner Family Chair in Finance Education). He is well known as the author of several widely used academic and practitioner texts on Valuation, Corporate Finance and Investment Management; as well as a provider of comprehensive data for valuation purposes.

  4. Risk premium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Risk_premium

    The risk premium is used extensively in finance in areas such as asset pricing, portfolio allocation and risk management. [2] Two fundamental aspects of finance, being equity and debt instruments, require the use and interpretation of associated risk premiums with the inputs for each explained below:

  5. Grinold and Kroner Model - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grinold_and_Kroner_Model

    Grinold, Kroner, and Siegel (2011) estimated the inputs to the Grinold and Kroner model and arrived at a then-current equity risk premium estimate between 3.5% and 4%. [2] The equity risk premium is the difference between the expected total return on a capitalization-weighted stock market index and the yield on a riskless government bond (in ...

  6. Equity risk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Equity_risk

    Equity risk is "the financial risk involved in holding equity in a particular investment." [1] Equity risk is a type of market risk that applies to investing in shares. [2] The market price of stocks fluctuates all the time, depending on supply and demand. The risk of losing money due to a reduction in the market price of shares is known as ...

  7. Business valuation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Business_valuation

    Investors who buy large-cap equity stocks, which are inherently more risky than long-term government bonds, require a greater return, so the next element of the build-up method is the equity risk premium. In determining a company's value, the long-horizon equity risk premium is used because the Company's life is assumed to be infinite.

  8. Weighted average cost of capital - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weighted_average_cost_of...

    Bond Yield Plus Risk Premium Approach; The equity component has advantages for the firm including: no legal obligation to pay (depends on class of shares) as opposed to debt, no maturity (unlike e.g. bonds), lower financial risk, and it could be cheaper than debt with good prospects of profitability.

  9. Risk–return spectrum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Risk–return_spectrum

    This line starts at the risk-free rate and rises as risk rises. The line will tend to be straight, and will be straight at equilibrium (see discussion below on domination). For any particular investment type, the line drawn from the risk-free rate on the vertical axis to the risk-return point for that investment has a slope called the Sharpe ratio.