Arbitrage Pricing Theory (APT)
Definition
Arbitrage Pricing Theory (APT) is a multi-factor model for estimating an asset’s expected return. It links an asset’s return to a linear combination of several macroeconomic or market factors that capture sources of systematic risk.
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How APT works
- APT assumes asset returns are driven by multiple systematic factors (not just market return).
- Each factor has a risk premium and each asset has a sensitivity (beta) to each factor.
- Expected return = risk-free rate + sum of (factor sensitivity × factor risk premium).
- The model recognizes that securities can be temporarily mispriced and that investors may exploit these mispricings; however, these trades are not risk-free arbitrage in the strict sense because they rely on the model’s validity and directional exposure to factors.
- Betas are typically estimated by regressing historical asset returns on the chosen factor realizations.
Formula
E(R_i) = R_f + Σ_{j=1}^n β_{ij} × RP_j
where:
– E(R_i) = expected return on asset i
– R_f = risk-free rate
– β_{ij} = sensitivity (beta) of asset i to factor j
– RP_j = risk premium associated with factor j
– n = number of factors
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Choosing factors
- APT does not prescribe specific factors; practitioners select factors based on economic theory and empirical performance.
- Commonly used factors: unexpected inflation, GDP/GNP growth, corporate bond spreads, yield-curve shifts, commodity prices, exchange rates, and major market indices.
- Empirically, four or five well-chosen factors often explain most of a security’s return, but factor choice is subjective and affects results.
Example
Given:
– Risk-free rate = 3%
– Factors with betas and risk premiums:
– GDP growth: β = 0.6, RP = 4% → 0.6 × 4% = 2.4%
– Inflation: β = 0.8, RP = 2% → 0.8 × 2% = 1.6%
– Gold prices: β = −0.7, RP = 5% → −0.7 × 5% = −3.5%
– S&P 500 return: β = 1.3, RP = 9% → 1.3 × 9% = 11.7%
Expected return = 3% + (2.4% + 1.6% − 3.5% + 11.7%) = 15.2%
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Comparison with CAPM
- CAPM is a single-factor model that uses market return as the only systematic risk factor.
- APT is multi-factor and therefore more flexible; it can capture multiple economic sources of risk that affect returns differently across assets.
Advantages
- Flexibility: can incorporate multiple, economically meaningful risk sources.
- Customization: investors and researchers can tailor factor sets to the asset class or market.
- Often explains cross-sectional variation in returns better than single-factor models.
Limitations
- No canonical factor list: users must select factors, which introduces subjectivity and potential model misspecification.
- Stability: sensitivities and factor risk premiums may change over time.
- Linear assumption: the model assumes linear relationships between factors and returns, which may not hold in all cases.
- Implementation requires reliable factor data and careful statistical estimation (e.g., regression), and results depend on these choices.
Bottom line
APT offers a practical, multi-factor framework for estimating expected returns and understanding systematic risk beyond market exposure. Its usefulness depends on appropriate factor selection, robust estimation of betas and risk premiums, and awareness of its assumptions and limitations.