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CAPM Calculator
Is This Stock Worth the Risk?
CAPM (Capital Asset Pricing Model) tells you what return you should expect from a stock based on how risky it is. The logic is simple: if Treasury bonds pay 3% with zero risk, why would you buy a volatile tech stock unless it's expected to return way more than 3%?
The formula is: Expected Return = Risk-Free Rate + Beta × (Market Return - Risk-Free Rate)
Example: Treasury bonds = 4%, S&P 500 average = 10%, Stock Beta = 1.5
Expected Return = 4% + 1.5 × (10% - 4%) = 4% + 9% = 13%
Translation: This stock is 50% more volatile than the market. If it's not expected to return at least 13%, you're not being paid enough for the extra risk.
Beta only tells you past volatility. Tesla had Beta 2.0 in 2020 (super volatile), but that doesn't guarantee it'll stay that way. Use CAPM as a sanity check, not a fortune teller.
Gold stocks often have Beta -0.5 (they go up when the market crashes). A negative Beta means CAPM will give you an expected return below the risk-free rate. That's OK—gold is insurance, not a growth play.
Real-World Example: Tech vs Utility Stock
CAPM Expected Return = 4% + 1.8 × (10% - 4%) = 14.8%
High risk, high expected return. If this stock is only projected to return 9%, run away.
CAPM Expected Return = 4% + 0.5 × (10% - 4%) = 7%
Low risk, low expected return. Boring but stable. Good for retirees.
What You Need to Know
- Risk-Free Rate: Use the 10-Year Treasury yield (around 4-5% in late 2024).
- Market Return: Historically, S&P 500 averages 10% annually. Some use 8% to be conservative.
- Beta: Find it on Yahoo Finance or Bloomberg. Beta 1.0 = market average volatility.
- CAPM Limitations: It assumes markets are efficient and investors are rational. (Spoiler: they're not.)
Frequently Asked Questions
What is CAPM and how does it work?
CAPM (Capital Asset Pricing Model) calculates what return you should expect from a stock based on its risk. The formula is: Expected Return = Risk-Free Rate + Beta × (Market Return - Risk-Free Rate). If Treasury bonds pay 3% (risk-free) and the S&P 500 averages 10%, a stock with Beta 1.5 should return 13.5% to justify its extra risk.
What does Beta mean in CAPM?
Beta measures how volatile a stock is compared to the market. Beta = 1 means it moves with the market. Beta > 1 means it's more volatile (tech stocks often have Beta 1.5-2.0). Beta < 1 means it's less volatile (utilities might have Beta 0.6). Higher beta=higher risk=you should demand higher returns.
Is CAPM useful for real investing?
CAPM is a theoretical model used by portfolio managers and analysts to estimate fair value. It's not a guarantee, but it helps answer: "Am I being compensated enough for this risk?" If a high-beta stock (Beta 2.0) is only expected to return 8% when CAPM says it should return 15%, that's a red flag.
What's a good risk-free rate to use?
Use the current 10-Year U.S. Treasury yield as the risk-free rate. As of late 2024, that's around 4-5%. Don't use savings account rates (too low) or short-term T-bills (too volatile). The 10-Year is the standard benchmark for long-term investing.