Downside risk asset pricing revisited: a new non-linear threshold model
Downside risk asset pricing revisited: a new non-linear threshold model
We derive an asset pricing equilibrium formula in which the risk premium on a risky asset is given by a weighted sum of the regular beta capital asset pricing model and a market portfolio downside risk beta. The equilibrium model is obtained from a new utility function that builds on the class of downside risk functions introduced in Bawa (1975, 1978) and that can be interpreted as an alternative to the disappointment utility functions of Dekel (1986) and Gul (1991), and the loss aversion utility functions as in Tversky and Kahneman (1991, 1992). This equilibrium model is econometrically represented by a non-linear threshold model that depends on a target return indicating market downturns. In the case where the target return is unknown we introduce an estimator of this threshold and a hypothesis test to assess statistically the significance of the downside risk parameter in the risk premium of the risky asset. An empirical exercise to industry, size and book-to-market portfolios uncovers a strong relationship between the risk premium and market portfolio downside risk
129-159
Olmo, Jose
706f68c8-f991-4959-8245-6657a591056e
October 2010
Olmo, Jose
706f68c8-f991-4959-8245-6657a591056e
Olmo, Jose
(2010)
Downside risk asset pricing revisited: a new non-linear threshold model.
Journal of Risk, 13 (1), .
Abstract
We derive an asset pricing equilibrium formula in which the risk premium on a risky asset is given by a weighted sum of the regular beta capital asset pricing model and a market portfolio downside risk beta. The equilibrium model is obtained from a new utility function that builds on the class of downside risk functions introduced in Bawa (1975, 1978) and that can be interpreted as an alternative to the disappointment utility functions of Dekel (1986) and Gul (1991), and the loss aversion utility functions as in Tversky and Kahneman (1991, 1992). This equilibrium model is econometrically represented by a non-linear threshold model that depends on a target return indicating market downturns. In the case where the target return is unknown we introduce an estimator of this threshold and a hypothesis test to assess statistically the significance of the downside risk parameter in the risk premium of the risky asset. An empirical exercise to industry, size and book-to-market portfolios uncovers a strong relationship between the risk premium and market portfolio downside risk
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Published date: October 2010
Organisations:
Economics
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Local EPrints ID: 348571
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/348571
ISSN: 1465-1211
PURE UUID: 15550732-2720-4696-a848-d366620d2ec7
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Date deposited: 15 Feb 2013 14:20
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:46
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