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January 26, 2006 – No Reward for Risk? Why Can't They Keep Their Story Straight?

The market rewards investors for taking risk. Right? High volatility means high risk. Right? High volatility therefore means excess return. Right? In their January 2006 paper entitled "High Idiosyncratic Volatility and Low Returns: International and Further U.S. Evidence", Andrew Ang, Robert Hodrick, Yuhang Xing and Xiaoyan Zhang test the relationship between past idiosyncratic volatility and future returns for stocks in developed markets around the world. Using data from 23 countries mostly over the period January 1980 through December 2003, they find that:

The following charts, extracted from the paper, graph the cumulative values of two portfolios that start with $1 invested at the beginning of January 1980 in: (1) stocks with the lowest idiosyncratic volatilities over the previous month (Quintile 1); and, (2) stocks with the highest idiosyncratic volatilities over the previous month (Quintile 5). The authors rebalance both portfolios monthly through December 2003. The authors construct the non-U.S. quintile portfolios as value-weighted sums of country quintile portfolios, expressed in U.S. dollars. The charts demonstrate that the volatility effect is much greater in the U.S. than elsewhere in the world.

In summary, exceptionally volatile stocks are on average inferior investments, or at least trades. There is no reward for this kind of risk, and presently no explanation for this effect.

For related research, see Blog Synthesis: Volatility Effects.



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