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June 12, 2006 - Why Highly Volatile Stocks Tend to Underperform

Conventional wisdom holds that: (1) risk begets reward; and, (2) volatility is a manifestation of risk. Exceptionally high volatility in individual stock prices should, therefore, indicate future excess returns in those stocks. In their May 2006 paper entitled "The Relation between Time-Series and Cross-Sectional Effects of Idiosyncratic Variance on Stock Returns in G7 Countries", Hui Guo and Robert Savickas investigate why the realized idiosyncratic volatility (beta) of individual stocks correlates negatively with future returns -- why there is a penalty instead of a reward for this apparent risk. Using two sets of U.S. data (1926-2005 and 1963-2005) and one set of international data (1973-2003), they conclude that:

The following figures, taken from the paper, show two different ways of predicting the returns of the same 25 portfolios. The top figure shows the results of predictions based on the value (book-to-market) premium, with portfolios ranking higher in value outperforming those ranking lower in value. The bottom figure shows the results of predictions based on the volatility premium, with portfolios ranking higher in average idiosyncratic volatility outperforming those ranking lower in volatility. The very similar results confirm a close, negative relationship between value and volatility. Value stocks tend to be less volatile than growth stocks.

In summary, the idiosyncratic volatility premium is closely related to the value premium, with low volatility and high value stocks tending to outperform. Insensitivity to discount rate (inflation, interest rates) shocks is the common underlying factor.

For related research, see: Blog Synthesis: Volatility Effects and Blog Synthesis: The Value Premium.

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