Browse Valuation and Analysis

Required Rate of Return: The Minimum Return an Investor Demands

Learn what the required rate of return means, how it is estimated, and why it matters in valuation, capital budgeting, and portfolio decisions.

The required rate of return is the minimum return an investor demands to justify putting capital into a particular investment. It reflects opportunity cost, time value of money, and compensation for risk.

If an investment cannot reasonably meet that return threshold, the investor should usually reject it or pay a lower price.

Why It Matters

The required rate of return sits at the center of many finance decisions:

  • security valuation

  • capital budgeting

  • portfolio selection

  • discount rate setting

It answers a basic question:

“Given the risk of this investment, what return do I need before it is worth owning?”

Basic Idea

At a high level, required return is usually built from:

  • a base return available on a safer alternative

  • one or more risk premiums

A simple framework is:

$$ \text{Required Return} = \text{Risk-Free Rate} + \text{Risk Premium} $$

The risk premium depends on the asset. Riskier investments require more compensation.

CAPM Version

For publicly traded equities, a common estimate comes from Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM):

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

In that framework:

Worked Example

Suppose:

  • the risk-free rate is 4%

  • the market risk premium is 5%

  • a stock has beta of 1.3

Then CAPM implies:

$$ 4\% + 1.3 \times 5\% = 10.5\% $$

That 10.5% is the investor’s required return under this model. If the stock’s expected return is only 8%, the investment may look unattractive at the current price.

Required Return vs. Discount Rate

These terms are closely related.

  • the required rate of return is the minimum return investors demand

  • the discount rate is the rate used to convert future cash flows into present value

In many valuation settings, the required return becomes the discount rate.

That is why the choice matters so much. A higher required return lowers present value, while a lower required return raises it.

What Changes Required Return

Required return rises when investors face more:

  • business risk

  • leverage

  • uncertainty in cash flows

  • illiquidity

  • macro instability

It also changes when safer alternatives become more attractive. If Treasury yields rise, investors often demand more from risky assets too.

FAQs

Is required return the same as expected return?

No. Expected return is what the investor thinks the asset may earn. Required return is the minimum the investor needs for the investment to be worth the risk.

Why do required returns change over time?

Because risk-free rates, risk premiums, valuations, and investor risk appetite all change over time.

Can two investors have different required rates of return for the same asset?

Yes. Investors may differ in risk tolerance, funding cost, liquidity needs, tax situation, or investment horizon.
Revised on Monday, May 18, 2026