National Repository of Grey Literature 2 records found  Search took 0.00 seconds. 
Corporate venture investors portfolio forming: what criteria is used and how the portfolio affects corporations' performance?
Su, Qihao ; Novák, Jiří (advisor) ; Semerák, Vilém (referee) ; Nivorozhkin, Eugene (referee)
Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM) is an equilibrium model to test relationship between expected return and market risk (Sharpe, 1964). The model research on pricing and return when the securities market reaches equilibrium and investors are rational and investing by diversification based on Markovitz portfolio theory (Markovitz, 1952). Fama and MacBeth (1973) proposed a cross-sectional testing methodology on CAPM and this regression method has been widely used in testing CAPM in developed markets since then. While CAPM is hard to explain more and more market anomalies (excessive return in smaller market value company) in cross section regression, Fama and French (1992) added two more factors (SMB and HML) and proposed three factor model. The empirical results show that three factor model is superior to CAPM in developed markets. Relevant studies have been conducted by Manjuunatha (2006) and Trimech et al. (2015) but show different results. This dissertation will use Fama-MacBeth cross section approach to test CAPM and Fama-French's three factor model in Chinese and Polish stock market respectively. Following Fama and MacBeth (1972) and Shweta and Anil (2015), three sub periods of Polish and Chinese stock market returns ranging from 2007 to 2018 are examined. The empirical results in this thesis...
Fama-French Model: Multiscale Portfolio Analysis
Spousta, Radek ; Kraicová, Lucie (advisor) ; Teplý, Petr (referee)
This thesis studies the empirical relationship between excess asset returns and the Fama−French risk factors at various scales using a combination of the Fama−French model and wavelet-based methods. We re-examine previously published results obtained for six portfolios formed on size and book-to-market ratio in the U.S. market, and focus on the influence of different scales on the original results. We conclude that the most the total variance of the risk factors and excess portfolio returns is concentrated at scale 1 and 2, which corresponds to periodicities of 2-4 months and 4-8 months, respectively. Next, we observe significant variation in estimated parameters across different scales. Furthermore, some of the Fama−French risk factors are strongly correlated at scale 2, 3 and 4, which is unobservable in standard correlation matrix. Overall, the multiscale approach seems beneficial for analysis of the Fama−French three-factor model as it reveals information that remains hidden to traditional methods.

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