The risk-free return is then subtracted from the return of the asset being analyzed.
The risk-free return is constant.
The rating is achieved by subtracting the risk-free return on a three-month Treasury bill from a fund's monthly returns.
Investors with different risk/return goals can use leverage to increase the ratio of the market return to the risk-free return in their portfolios.
In other words, if the deal were a sure thing, there's a rather nice risk-free return just sitting there waiting to be picked up.
The market return minus the risk-free return is the risk premium that investors expect for investing in the market portfolio.
The administration based this offset - sometimes called a clawback - on the supposedly risk-free average return on Treasury bonds.
Now a small but persistent band argues that the risk-free returns on Mexican paper could prove illusory too.
And a higher risk-free return, such as on Treasury bonds, leads to a lower fair value for stock prices.
R is the risk-free return, or the return from government securities, as government securities have no risk.