Publication: Asset pricing and downside risk in the Australian share market
Type:
Article
Date
2017-09-14
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Routledge
Abstract
As downside risk has been identified as a separate risk exposure to investors, we investigate whether downside beta and co-skewness exposure impact on the return to investors in Australian equities. Although considered as a developed market, the Australian Securities Exchange merits separate investigation, as it is small and concentrated on some sectors, when compared with the major developed markets. As realized returns are a proxy for expected returns, we separately examine conditional returns in upturn and downturn periods. We find that both downside risks are separately priced by investors, and that our results are unaffected by the inclusion of a range of company characteristics. We subsequently confirm that returns to each downside risk are not related. In robustness tests, we conclude that the return to downside risk cannot be explained by a size, a value, or a momentum premium. Although it also has explanatory power, the inclusion of a leverage factor also does not reduce the explanatory power of downside risk.
Description
Keywords
Asset pricing, downside risk, Australian equity market, risk exposure and returns
Citation
Lakshman Alles & Louis Murray (2017) Asset pricing and downside risk in the Australian share market, Applied Economics, 49:43, 4336-4350, DOI: 10.1080/00036846.2017.1282143
