The CAPM provides a justification for passive or index investing by positing that assets that are not on the efficient frontier will either rise or lower in price until they are on the efficient frontier of the market portfolio.The CAPM Risk Premium on an investment is the measure of how much the asset's performance differs from the risk free rate. Negative Risk Premium generally indicates that the investment is a bad investment, and the money should be allocated to the risk free asset or to a different asset with a higher risk premium.
The Capital Market Line relates the excess expected return on an efficient market portfolio to it's Risk. The slope of the CML is the Sharpe Ratio for the market portfolio. The Security Market line is constructed by calculating the line of Risk Premium over CAPM.beta
. For the benchmark asset this will be 1 over the risk premium of the benchmark asset.
Probably the most complete criticism of CAPM in actual practice (as opposed to structural or theory critiques) is that it posits a market equilibrium, but is most often used only in a partial equilibrium setting, for example by using the S&P 500 as the benchmark asset. A better method of using and testing the CAPM would be to use a general equilibrium model that took global assets from all asset classes into consideration.
Chapter 7 of Ruppert(2004) gives an extensive overview of CAPM, its assumptions and deficiencies.
CAPM.RiskPremium
is the premium returned to the investor over the risk free asset
$$\overline{(R_{a}-R_{f})}$$
CAPM.CML
calculates the expected return of the asset against the benchmark Capital Market Line
CAPM.CML.slope
calculates the slope of the Capital Market Line for looking at how a particular asset compares to the CML
CAPM.SML.slope
calculates the slope of the Security Market Line for looking at how a particular asset compares to the SML created by the benchmark