Browse Valuation and Analysis

Capital Asset Pricing Model

Learn what the capital asset pricing model is, how it links expected return to systematic risk, and why beta matters in equity valuation.

The capital asset pricing model (CAPM) is a finance model that links an asset’s expected return to its exposure to systematic market risk.

The central idea is that investors should be compensated for time value of money and for bearing market-related risk that cannot be diversified away.

Core Formula

In its standard form:

$$ E(R_i) = R_f + \beta_i (E(R_m) - R_f) $$

Where:

  • (R_f) is the risk-free rate
  • (\beta) measures sensitivity to market movements
  • (E(R_m) - R_f) is the market risk premium

Why It Matters

CAPM is often used to estimate a cost of equity, benchmark expected return, or compare whether an asset’s return looks adequate given its systematic risk.

It is especially useful when analysts need a disciplined way to connect required return with beta.

Worked Example

Suppose the risk-free rate is 3%, the market risk premium is 5%, and a stock’s beta is 1.2.

Under CAPM, the expected return would be:

$$ 3\% + 1.2 \times 5\% = 9\% $$

That 9% becomes a candidate required return for valuation work.

Scenario Question

An investor says, “A higher-beta stock should always outperform in every short period.”

Answer: No. CAPM is an expected-return framework, not a guarantee about short-run realized performance.

FAQs

Does CAPM explain all investment returns?

No. It is a foundational model, but real-world returns can also reflect size, value, momentum, leverage, and other factors.

Why is beta so important in CAPM?

Because CAPM treats systematic market exposure as the main risk investors must be paid to bear.

Is CAPM mainly a valuation tool or a portfolio tool?

It is both. It helps estimate required return and also frames how risk and return relate in diversified portfolios.
Revised on Monday, May 18, 2026