I must’ve missed out on this in Finance 101, but can someone explain to me the shape of the efficient frontier? I understand that if you only consider risky assets, you end up with something that looks like a truncated y = log(x) graph, or the top half of a parabola that opens to the right, and that when you add a risk-free asset to the mix, you end up with the CML - a straight line that starts at the risk-free rate and goes through M, the optimal risky portfolio.
My question is, why do they get those shapes? In particular, I’m still wondering why adding a risk-free asset creates a linear efficient frontier.
My question is, why do they get those shapes? In particular, I’m still wondering why adding a risk-free asset creates a linear efficient frontier.