Publication: The cost of downside protection and the time diversification issue in South Asian stock markets
Type:
Article
Date
2008-06-01
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Routledge
Abstract
The objectives of this article are to carry out a comparative study of the
costs of downside protection for investors in the stock markets of
Bangladesh, India, Pakistan and Sri Lanka, and to investigate the time
diversification issue in these markets by examining the variation of this
cost as the investment horizon is extended. The cost of downside
protection and time diversification effects are investigated by examining
the properties of a protective put strategy and a capital protected equity
participation strategy in each country’s stock market over investment
horizons ranging from 1 to20 years. Long-horizon investment outcomes
are generated using a bootstrapping technique. Results indicate that the
cost of downside protection differs from one country to another, but there
is a common pattern of the cost decreasing as the investment horizon
lengthens. In overall terms, the pattern of decreasing protection costs at
longer investment horizons is consistent with the notion of the time
diversification benefits of investment risk.
Description
Keywords
downside protection, diversification issue, South Asian stock markets, Time Diversification
Citation
Lakshman Alles (2008) The cost of downside protection and the time diversification issue in South Asian stock markets, Applied Financial Economics, 18:10, 835-843, DOI: 10.1080/09603100701222333
