Idiosyncratic Volatility, Expected Windfall, and the Cross-Section of Stock Returns
Abstract
This paper analyzes the roles of idiosyncratic risk and firm-level conditional skewness in determining cross-sectional returns. It is shown that the traditional EGARCH estimates of conditional idiosyncratic volatility may bring significant finite sample estimation bias in the presence of non-Gaussianity. We propose a new estimator that has more robust sampling performance than the EGARCH MLE in the presence of heavy-tail or skewed innovations. Our cross-sectional portfolio analysis demonstrates that the idiosyncratic volatility puzzle documented by Ang, Hodrick, Xiang, and Zhang (2006) exists intertemporally. We conduct further analysis to solve the puzzle. We show that two factors idiosyncratic variance and individual conditional skewness play important roles in determining cross-sectional returns. A new concept, the “expected windfall,” is introduced as an alternate measure of conditional return skewness. After controlling for these two additional factors, we solve the major piece of this puzzle: Our cross-sectional regression tests identify a positive relationship between conditional idiosyncratic volatility and expected returns for over 99% of the total market capitalization of the NYSE, NASDAQ, and AMEX stock exchanges.
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Acknowledgements
Acknowledgment
We thank Yoosoon Chang, Joon Park, Tom Fomby, participants of the 14th Advances in Econometrics Conference, and a referee for their very helpful comments on earlier versions of this paper.
Citation
Wan, C. and Xiao, Z. (2014), "Idiosyncratic Volatility, Expected Windfall, and the Cross-Section of Stock Returns", Essays in Honor of Peter C. B. Phillips (Advances in Econometrics, Vol. 33), Emerald Group Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 713-749. https://doi.org/10.1108/S0731-905320140000033020
Publisher
:Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2014 Emerald Group Publishing Limited