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Arbitrage, Factor Structure, and Mean-Variance Analysis on Large Asset Markets

Gary Chamberlain, +1 more
- 01 Sep 1983 - 
- Vol. 51, Iss: 5, pp 1281-1304
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TLDR
In this article, the authors examine the implications of arbitrage in a market with many assets and show that the linear functionals that give the mean and cost of a portfolio are continuous; hence there exist unique portfolios that represent these functionals.
Abstract
We examine the implications of arbitrage in a market with many assets. The absence of arbitrage opportunities implies that the linear functionals that give the mean and cost of a portfolio are continuous; hence there exist unique portfolios that represent these functionals. These portfolios span the mean-variance efficient set. We resolve the question of when a market with many assets permits so much diversification that risk-free investment opportunities are available. Ross [12,14] showed that if there is a factor structure, then the mean returns are approximately linear functions of factor loadings. We define an approximate factor structure and show that this weaker restriction is sufficient for Ross' result. If the covariance matrix of the asset returns has only K unbounded eigenvalues, then there is an approximate factor structure and it is unique. The corresponding K eigenvectors converge and play the role of factor loadings. Hence only a principal component analysis is needed in empirical work.

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On the Estimation of Beta-Pricing Models

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References
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Book

Linear statistical inference and its applications

TL;DR: Algebra of Vectors and Matrices, Probability Theory, Tools and Techniques, and Continuous Probability Models.
Journal ArticleDOI

The arbitrage theory of capital asset pricing

TL;DR: Ebsco as mentioned in this paper examines the arbitrage model of capital asset pricing as an alternative to the mean variance pricing model introduced by Sharpe, Lintner and Treynor.
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A critique of the asset pricing theory's tests Part I: On past and potential testability of the theory

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