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Tom's later edits of LPH asset pricing lecture on Dec 31
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lectures/asset_pricing_lph.md

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## Overview
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This lecture is about some implications of asset-pricing theories that are based on the equation
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$ E m R = 1$, where $R$ is the gross return on an asset, $m$ is a stochastic discount factor, and $E$ is a mathematical expectation with respect to the joint distribution of $R$ and $m$.
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$E m R = 1,$ where $R$ is the gross return on an asset, $m$ is a stochastic discount factor, and $E$ is a mathematical expectation with respect to a joint probability distribution of $R$ and $m$.
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Instances of this equation occur in many models.
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This is a measure of the part of the risk in $R^j$ that is not priced because it is uncorrelated with the stochastic discount factor and so can be diversified away (i.e., averaged out to zero by holding a diversified portfolio).
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## Sharpe Ratios and the Price of Risk
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An asset's **Sharpe ratio** is defined as
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$$
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\frac{E(R^i) - R^f}{\sigma(R^i)}
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$$
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The above figure reminds us that all assets $R^i$ whose returns are on the mean-standard deviation frontier
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satisfy
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$$
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\frac{E(R^i) - R^f}{\sigma(R^i)} = \frac{\sigma(m)}{E m}
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$$
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The ratio $\frac{\sigma(m)}{E m} $ is often called the **market price of risk**.
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Evidently it equals the maximum Sharpe ratio for any asset or portfolio of assets.
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## Mathematical Structure of Frontier
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The mathematical structure of the mean-variance frontier described by inequality {eq}`eq:ERM6` implies

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