If investors can purchase a risk free asset with some return
rF, then all correctly priced risky assets or portfolios will have expected return of the form :{E(R_P)} = r_F + b \sigma_P where
b is some incremental return to offset the risk (sometimes known as a
risk premium), and σP is the risk itself expressed as the standard deviation. By rearranging, we can see the risk premium has the following value :b = \frac{E(R_P) - r_F}{\sigma_P} Now consider the case of another portfolio that is a combination of a risk free asset and the correctly priced portfolio we considered above (which is itself just another risky asset). If it is correctly priced, it will have exactly the same form: :E(R_C) = r_F + \sigma_C b Substituting in our derivation for the risk premium above: :E(R_C) = r_F + \sigma_C \frac{E(R_P) - r_F}{\sigma_P} This yields the Capital Allocation Line. ==See also==