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A risk premium (plural risk premia) is the minimum difference a person requires to be willing to take an uncertain bet, between the expected value of the bet and the certain value that he is indifferent to. The certainty equivalent is the guaranteed payoff at which a person is "indifferent" between accepting the guaranteed payoff and a higher but uncertain payoff. (It is the amount of the higher payout minus the risk premium.)
ExampleSuppose a game show participant may choose one of two doors, one that hides $1,000 and one that hides $0. Further suppose that the host also allows the contestant to take $500 instead of choosing a door. All three options (door 1, door 2, or take $500) have the same expected value of $500, so there is no risk premium for choosing the doors over the guaranteed $500. A contestant unconcerned about risk is indifferent to these choices. However, a risk averse contestant may be more likely to choose no door and accept the guaranteed $500. If too many contestants are risk averse, the game show may encourage selection of the riskier choices (door 1 or door 2) by creating a risk premium. If the game show offers $2,000 behind the good door, increasing to $1,000 the expected value of choosing doors 1 or 2, the risk premium becomes $500 (i.e., $1,000 expected value − $500 guaranteed amount). Contestants with a minimum acceptable rate of return of $500 or more will likely choose a door instead of accepting the guaranteed $500. FinanceIn finance, the risk premium can be the expected rate of return above the risk-free interest rate. When measuring risk, a common sense approach is to compare the risk-free return on T-bills and the very risky return on other investments. The difference between these two returns can be interpreted as a measure of the excess return on the average risky asset. This excess return is known as the risk premium.
The white paper Equity Risk Premium: Expectations Great and Small notes that “it is dangerous to engage in simplistic analyses of historical ERPs to generate ex ante forecasts that differ from the realized mean.” Standard & Poor’s states “the most correct method is to use an arithmetic average of historical returns.” If a return represents several periods of growth, use the geometric mean of the periods. See alsoExternal links
More about Risk_premium: market premium risk, equity premium risk, equity practice premium research risk, current market premium risk, bond plus premium risk yield, maturity premium risk, |
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