Expected Return
Categories: Investing, Managed Funds, Metrics
How much an investor thinks they will likely make from an investment.
It may seem like a guess. Like...a lotto player's expected return might be $300 million. Their likely return is a loss of $1. But they expect a lot more. That's expected return.
For savvy investors, the process for determining expected return is more rigorous. It's not "hoped-for return" or "wouldn't-mom-be-proud-if-I-earned-this-much-and-finally-moved-out-of-the-basement return."
Basically, the investor figures the possible outcomes of an investment and the likely return. Situation 1, you make a 10% return. Situation 2, you double your money. Situation 3, you lose everything.
The investor then calculates the likelihoods for each outcome. Situation 1 is 70% likely. Situation 2 is 20% likely. Situation 3 is 10% likely.
They multiply the various likelihoods by the corresponding returns for those events. Situation 1 becomes 0.07% return. Situation 2 becomes a 0.2% return. Situation 3 becomes a -0.1% return.
Add that all together (0.07 + 0.2 + (-0.1)) and it gives the expected return for a particular investment. In this case, the expected return would be about 17%.
Think about roulette. Each number has a 1/38 chance to come up. The numbers pay 35 to 1 if you hit. You put $5 on number 22.
You've got a 2.63% chance of making $175. Meanwhile, you've got a 97.37% chance of losing $5. So multiply 0.9737 by -5...that's the situation where you lose. The figure you get is -4.8685.
Now, look at the winning situation. That's 0.0263 times $175. You get $4.6025.
Now add the two together. $4.6025 + (-4.8685). The answer is -0.266. Your expected return is a loss of about 27 cents each spin.
Not a great investment. Unless you're the casino, of course, in which case you reverse the signs on all those cases and run the math again. The casino gets an expected profit of about 27 cents on each $5 bet on an individual roulette number.
Figuring out these chances for a real-life investment can take some estimation and guesswork. The numbers in roulette are easy to figure out because there are a fixed number of outcomes that have easily discernible odds. A real life investment (buying shares of a biotech startup, or going short on Swiss franc-denominated bonds) are less straightforward.
But then, that's why mutual funds and hedge funds have Stanford/CalTech/MIT League-Caliber mathematicians and statisticians to get as close as they can.
Related or Semi-related Video
Finance: What is an Expected Return?8 Views
Finance, a la shmoop. what is expected return? Okay we've been experimenting for
months on libertarians with cancer in a gwangju prison. Our drug is gonna do one [ man swallows pill]
of three things. A. it may make the prisoners glow in the dark. Not all that
useful as a drug discovery but it would allow investors to sell the company to [man's face glows]
cirque de soleil who would be thrilled to cut down on bodypaint expenses. All
right well if event A happens investors will get at least a 20% return on our [circus performers shown]
money odds of the the glow must go on happening ? 35% . okay moving on. Event B, our
drug may well just kill them - yeah that's a bunch of libertarians in a gwangju
prison. Who's gonna notice, right? in which case investors lose all of their money [money on fire]
and the glow must go on just folds up tent, and goes away. The return there
would be zero. Odds of this happening? Well, 60% yeah
six out of ten. Probably gonna die. okay event C the drug cures cancer! If that [written explanation shown]
happens while investors get a thousand percent return on their money .Save the
world and in general improve their tinder match ratio by like a zillion.
Odds of this happening, well just 5% but hey it's worth a shot right?
So our adjusted probability chart looks like- this - see we got return and odds and [chart shown]
expect the case 2035, 7 yeah there we go.
So what is all this telling us ? Well that the overall expected return - yeah you
knew we'd get there eventually - is a 57% return on our investment. Great return!
bottom line do it the chance of curing cancer would be well worth the risk. And [people dance]
if not well at least there would be fewer bicycling accidents.