Learn what the market risk premium is, how it is used in CAPM and valuation, and why it matters for required return.
The market risk premium is the extra return investors expect from the overall market above the risk-free rate. It represents the compensation demanded for accepting broad market risk instead of holding a nearly riskless asset.
In simple form:
Where:
\(E(R_m)\) is the expected market return
\(R_f\) is the risk-free rate
The market risk premium is one of the most important inputs in finance because it helps convert risk into required return.
It shows up in:
equity valuation
If the market premium rises, investors are demanding more compensation for risk. That tends to push required returns up and present values down.
In CAPM, the market risk premium is scaled by Beta:
This means:
the premium is the reward for market risk as a whole
beta determines how much of that reward a specific asset should earn
An asset with beta of 1.5 is exposed to more market risk than an asset with beta of 0.8, so CAPM assigns it a larger share of the premium.
Suppose:
the risk-free rate is 4%
the expected market return is 9%
Then the market risk premium is 5%.
If a stock has beta of 1.2, CAPM would estimate a required return of:
That 10% is not a guaranteed return. It is the return investors would require to hold that risk under the CAPM framework.
In many practical discussions, people use the two terms almost interchangeably. But context matters.
Market risk premium usually refers to the return on the market over the risk-free rate
equity risk premium may be used more broadly for the extra return demanded from equities over safer assets
In ordinary portfolio and valuation work, the overlap is often close enough that the difference is mostly about precision of language.
The market risk premium is not fixed.
It changes with:
valuation levels
interest rates
macro uncertainty
investor sentiment
recession risk
That is why analysts debate the right premium to use. A small input change can materially alter valuation results.
Risk-Free Rate: The baseline return used in the premium calculation.
Beta: Scales the market premium for a particular asset in CAPM.
Required Rate of Return: Often built from the risk-free rate plus a risk premium.
Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM): The classic model that uses the market risk premium directly.
Cost of Capital: Uses risk premiums to estimate the return investors require.