Under
general equilibrium theory prices are determined through
market pricing by
supply and demand. Here asset prices jointly satisfy the requirement that the quantities of each asset supplied and the quantities demanded must be equal at that price - so called
market clearing. These models are born out of
modern portfolio theory, with the
capital asset pricing model (CAPM) as the prototypical result. Prices here are determined with reference to macroeconomic variables–for the CAPM, the "overall market"; for the
CCAPM, overall wealth– such that individual preferences are subsumed. These models aim at modeling the statistically derived
probability distribution of the market prices of "all" securities at a given future investment horizon; they are thus of "large dimension". See
§ Risk and portfolio management: the P world under
Mathematical finance. General equilibrium pricing is then used when evaluating diverse portfolios, creating one asset price for many assets. Calculating an investment or share value here, entails: (i) a
financial forecast for the business or project in question; (ii) where the
output cashflows are then
discounted at the rate returned by the model selected; this rate in turn reflecting the "riskiness" - i.e. the
idiosyncratic, or
undiversifiable risk - of these cashflows; (iii) these present values are then aggregated, returning the value in question. See: , and
Valuation using discounted cash flows. (Note that an alternate, although less common approach, is to apply a "fundamental valuation" method, such as the
T-model, which instead relies on accounting information, attempting to model return based on the company's expected financial performance.) == Rational pricing ==