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Introduction to investment valuation and securities risk
Category : How Stock and Bond Markets Value Investment Securities
Introduction to investment valuation and securities
risk
The securities markets provide
an evolving
consensus of the risk-adjusted value of particular securities. By
understanding how the markets value securities, individual investors
can chose more durable investment strategies
Judging the potential usefulness of different investment strategies
requires some understanding of what the public securities markets
really do. This article discusses how the markets price financial
securities from the standpoints of risk and return. This description
generally characterizes the behavior of modern securities markets in
industrialized countries around the world.
Securities markets provide a continually adjusting balance of
trading order supply and demand, wherein price changes enable this
evolving balance. Important observations about securities markets from
investment science are that:
- The aggregate market
return consists of payouts plus capital
gains or losses across all investors. The aggregate market return is
the total possible return for publicly traded securities.
- Fundamentally, markets
look forward. Participants attempt to peer
into the murky and fundamentally unknowable spectrum of possible future
events.
- Markets price securities on a risk-adjusted basis. Current
securities prices are discounted versus their projected future values
to reward certain kinds of risk taking. Prices differ from one security
to another, because expected economic returns differ and because
investors perceive greater or lesser certainty in the realization of
those expected returns.
- Current market prices reflect the current consensus or
balance of
expected risk and expected return. This valuation consensus reflects
the balance across all active participants, including those who are
paying attention, but chose not to act.
- Current market prices tend to reflect fully all currently
known information associated with a particular security. There may be a
wide range in the interpretation of the importance of various
information, and asset market values reflect the consensus across all
investors.
- New information disseminates widely and very rapidly. Investors
quickly interpret new information for its potential impact upon both
value and risk. Prices rapidly reflect new information, as supply and
demand shifts quickly and market prices change accordingly.
- When some investors “win,” others must
“lose” relative to the aggregate market return.
Whether
luck or skill determines who wins or loses and how one can tell the
difference are pivotal questions in choosing investment strategies.
By understanding these critical investment subjects and being
aware
of the associated scientific evidence, investors can adopt investment
strategies that are potentially more profitable. Scientific evidence
indicating which strategies are preferable reduces confusion and
reinforces the confidence needed to ride out market volatility.
Value fluctuations and conflicting opinions can challenge
anyone to
formulate and stick with a set of investment principles. Market
fluctuations over time and across business cycles, industries, asset
classes, geographies, etc. can raise significant doubts. The maelstrom
of media and commentator truth, noise, and rubbish increases investor
confusion. This very volatility and conflict of opinion requires
investors to strive for an objective basis for choosing their
investment strategies.
The Skilled Investor can help individual investors to
understand
some of the important “whys” of investing. Many
investors
want to jump immediately to investment tactics and may avoid thinking
more deeply about the underlying logic or validity of those tactics.
Shooting prior to aiming generally leads to poor results. Given the
astonishing amount of erroneous investment information and fallacious
theories circulating, tactical action without a scientific anchor can
be hard on your wallet. (See: How
can individual investors trust, when so much investment information is
rubbish?)
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These related articles may also be useful to you:
Securities Valuation:
Returns and Risk Premiums:
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