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The asymmetric impact of rational and irrational components of fear index on S&P 500 index returns

Gökçe Soydemir (California State University, Stanislaus, Turlock, California, USA)
Rahul Verma (University of Houston-Downtown, Houston, Texas, USA)
Andrew Wagner (California State University, Stanislaus, Turlock, California, USA)

Review of Behavioral Finance

ISSN: 1940-5979

Article publication date: 9 October 2017

641

Abstract

Purpose

Investors’ fear can be rational, emanating from the natural dynamics of economic fundamentals, or it can be quasi rational and not attributable to any known risk factors. Using VIX from Chicago Board Options Exchange as a proxy for investors’ fear, the purpose of this paper is to consider the following research questions: to what extent does noise play a role in the formation of investors’ fear? To what extent is the impact of fear on S&P 500 index returns driven by rational reactions to new information vs fear induced by noise in stock market returns? To what extent do S&P 500 index returns display asymmetric behavior in response to investor’s rational and quasi rational fear?

Design/methodology/approach

In a two-step process, the authors first decompose investors’ fear into its rational and irrational components by generating two additional variables representing fear induced by rational expectations and fear due to noise. The authors then estimate a three-vector autoregression (VAR) model to examine their relative impact on S&P 500 returns.

Findings

Impulse responses generated from a 13-variable VAR model show that investors’ fear is driven by risk factors to some extent, and this extent is well captured by the Fama and French three-factor and the Carhart four-factor models. Specifically, investors’ fear is negatively related to the market risk premium, negatively related to the premium between value and growth stocks, and positively related to momentum. The magnitude and duration of the impact of the market risk premium is almost twice that of the impact of the premium on value stocks and the momentum of investors’ fear. However, almost 90 percent of the movement in investors’ fear is not attributable to the 12 risk factors chosen in this study and thus may be largely irrational in nature. The impulse responses suggest that both rational and irrational fear have significant negative effects on market returns. Moreover, the effects are asymmetric on S&P 500 index returns wherein irrational upturns in fear have a greater impact than downturns. In addition, the component of investors’ fear driven by irrationality or noise has more than twice the impact on market returns in terms of magnitude and duration than the impact of the rational component of investors’ fear.

Originality/value

The results are consistent with the view that one of the most important drivers of stock market returns is irrational fear that is not rooted in economic fundamentals.

Keywords

Citation

Soydemir, G., Verma, R. and Wagner, A. (2017), "The asymmetric impact of rational and irrational components of fear index on S&P 500 index returns", Review of Behavioral Finance, Vol. 9 No. 3, pp. 278-291. https://doi.org/10.1108/RBF-05-2016-0025

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2017, Emerald Publishing Limited

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