Risk-free asset: Difference between revisions
(Create page. Sources: Linked pages.) |
(Add link.) |
||
Line 31: | Line 31: | ||
* [[Risk-free rate of return]] | * [[Risk-free rate of return]] | ||
* [[Risk-free rates]] | * [[Risk-free rates]] | ||
* [[Risk off]] | * [[Risk-off]] | ||
* [[Risk on]] | * [[Risk-off asset]] | ||
* [[Risk-on]] | |||
* [[Treasury]] | * [[Treasury]] | ||
Revision as of 05:49, 10 February 2024
Investment management - risk appetite - flight to quality - rates of return - risk-free rate of return - risk assets.
For practical investment management and portfolio management purposes, a risk-free asset is considered to be one on which the expected rate of investment return is so likely to be achieved, that it can be treated as near-enough risk free for the purpose.
The usual example is short-dated debt obligations of a low-risk domestic central government.
For example in the United States, short-dated obligations of the US Treasury.
In this context, all assets that are not risk-free assets, are classed as risk assets.
The exact boundary between risk assets and risk-free assets can vary, depending on the purpose of the classification.
See also
- Benchmark
- Capital asset pricing model
- Credit spread
- Expected rate of return
- Flight to quality
- Gilts
- Interest rate risk
- Investment management
- LIBOR
- Market risk premium
- Portfolio
- Rate of return
- RFR
- Risk appetite
- Risk asset
- Risk-free rate of return
- Risk-free rates
- Risk-off
- Risk-off asset
- Risk-on
- Treasury