Stock returns and volatility: empirical evidence from fourteen countries
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Date
2005
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Routledge Journals, Taylor & Francis Ltd
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Abstract
This is a pioneering effort to test in 14 countries the relationship between stock market returns and their forecast volatility derived from the symmetric and asymmetric conditional heteroscedasticity models. Both weekly and monthly returns and their volatility are investigated. An out-of-sample testing methodology is employed using volatility forecasts instead of investigating the relation between stock returns and their in-sample volatility estimates. Expected volatility is derived from the ARCH(p), GARCH(1, 1), GJR-GARCH(1, 1) and EGARCH(1, 1) forecast models. Expected volatility is found to have a significant negative or positive effect on country returns in a few cases. Unexpected volatility has a negative effect on weekly stock returns in six to seven countries and on monthly returns in nine to eleven countries depending on the volatility forecasting model. However, it has a positive effect on weekly and monthly returns in none of the countries investigated. It is concluded that the return variance may not be an appropriate measure of risk.
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Balaban, E.; Bayar, A. "Stock returns and volatility: empirical evidence from fourteen countries", Applied Economics Letters, Vol.12, No.10, pp.603-611, (2005).
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Q3
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Volume
12
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10
Start Page
603
End Page
611