The CAPM suffers from several limitations, such as the use of a mean-variance framework and the fact that returns are captured by one risk factor – the market risk factor. In a well-diversified portfolio, the unsystematic risk of various stocks cancels out and is essentially eliminated.
The Arbitrage Pricing Theory (APT) model was put forward to address these shortcomings and offers a general approach of determining the asset prices other than the mean and variances.
The APT model assumes that the security returns are generated according to multiple factor models, which consist of a linear combination of several systematic risk factors. Such factors could be the inflation rate, GDP growth rate, real interest rates, or dividends.
The equilibrium asset pricing equation according to the APT model is as follows:
Here, E[Ri] is the expected...