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Intro You must complete this assignment in the next 2 hours. Save each answer immediately by clicking on the "Save" butt

Posted: Sun Jun 05, 2022 7:26 am
by answerhappygod
Intro You Must Complete This Assignment In The Next 2 Hours Save Each Answer Immediately By Clicking On The Save Butt 1
Intro You Must Complete This Assignment In The Next 2 Hours Save Each Answer Immediately By Clicking On The Save Butt 1 (169.13 KiB) Viewed 53 times
Intro You must complete this assignment in the next 2 hours. Save each answer immediately by clicking on the "Save" button. You can change your answer any time before your time is up. Unsaved answers will not be submitted. The table below shows historical end-of-week adjusted close prices (including dividends) for a stock and the S&P 500. A B с D 1 Week Stock S&P 500 2 0 36.07 2,630 3 1 36.71 2,572 4 2 39.64 2,590 5 3 39.01 2,623 6 4 36.73 2,676 7 39.03 2,602 8 40.8 2,689 9 36.01 2,628 10 8 36.34 2,726 11 9 37.22 2,879 12 10 38.39 2,842 13 Sum 415.95 29,457 SUM(C2:C12) Copy and paste all data into your own spreadsheet. Calculate the sum of the prices for both assets to check that you copied all values correctly. If your sums match those shown above, you can delete row 13 in your spreadsheet. " +56 N 7
Attempt 1/1 Part 10 What is the annual Sharpe ratio of a portfolio with 60% invested in the stock and 40% in the S&P 500? The T-bill yield is still 2%. Assume that the stock has an expected return of 11% and the S&P 500 of 8% (both EARS), and that the annualized variances and covariance stay the same as in the past. Hint: The covariance of returns over N weeks is N times the weekly covariance. Hint: Since we're looking at only one period (of one year), the distinction between rebalancing and not rebalancing is irrelevant here. 3+ decimals Save Part 11 What is the annual Sharpe ratio of the optimal risky portfolio? 3+ decimals Save Attempt 1/1