Abstract

In 1976 Stephen A. Ross developed a new theory of securities pricing called the Arbitrage Pricing Theory (APT). According to the APT the return an investor can expect from a share is related to the risk-free rate and numerous other factors rather than just the return on the market as predicted by the Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM). Although a considerable amount of empirical research has been carried out into the APT in the United States of America, little appears to have been done in South Africa In this article empirical research is carried out into the APT using data from the JSE. The research involves both attempting to establish the number of 'priced' factors influencing risky security returns on the JSE and comparing the explanatory ability of the APT and CAPM. Factor analysis is used to establish the number of 'priced' APT factors and regression analysis is used to assess the explanatory ability of the models. The findings suggest that at least two factors determine security returns, rather than just the return on the market as predicted by the CAPM, and that a two-factor APT model has significantly better explanatory powers than the CAPM in an ex-post sense. Finally, it is apparent that considerably more empirical research needs to be done if the factors are to be conclusively identified and checked for stability through time.

Highlights

  • Formulated by Stephen Ross in 1976, the Arbitrage Pricq Theory (APT) is based on the same intuition as the Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM), namely the common variability of asset returns

  • The findings suggest that at least two factors determine security returns, rather than just the return on the market as predicted by the CAPM, and that a two-factor Arbitrage Pricing Theory (APT) model has significantly better explanatory powers than the CAPM in an ex-post sense

  • The theory is, far more general than the CAPM and is seen by some researchers to offer a testable alternative to the CAPM

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Summary

Introduction

Formulated by Stephen Ross in 1976, the Arbitrage Pricq Theory (APT) is based on the same intuition as the Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM), namely the common variability of asset returns. According to the Arbitrage Pricing Theory (APT) the retum an investor can expect from a share is related to the risk-free rate (time value of money) and numerous other factors rather than just the return on the market as postulated by the CAPM. A further theoretical difference between the APT and the CAPM is that the formulation of the APT does not rely on the existence of market equilibrium but on the absence of arbitrage opponunities. The absence of arbitrage opportunities being a necessary but insufficient condition for market equilibrium (Cho, 1984: 1485).

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