The low volatility anomaly in Chinese equity market

The most well-known anomaly in finance suggests that there is no trade- off between risk and return. The portfolio of the low volatility stocks provides better returns than the portfolio of the high volatility stocks. The existing literature offers numerous possible explanations for this anomaly. On...

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Main Author: Hong, Zhuoling
Format: Dissertation (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/71118/
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author Hong, Zhuoling
author_facet Hong, Zhuoling
author_sort Hong, Zhuoling
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description The most well-known anomaly in finance suggests that there is no trade- off between risk and return. The portfolio of the low volatility stocks provides better returns than the portfolio of the high volatility stocks. The existing literature offers numerous possible explanations for this anomaly. One of the studies from Bali, Cakici, and Whitelaw (2011) demonstrates that investors’ demand for lottery-like stocks is a significant driver of the low beta anomaly and in this research, they introduced a behaviour measure variable "MAX", which represents lottery characteristics. Hence, in this paper, we are going to follow Bali et al. (2011, 2017)'s research and use "MAX" to investigate the demand for lottery-type stocks in explanation of the presence this anomaly in Chinese equity market. The investigation of our study results in the confirmation of the existence of the low beta anomaly in China and this anomaly can be explained by lottery characteristic. The accumulated excess returns over the observation period for the hedging portfolio is 80.55 percent, which indicates that investors cannot gain an additional return by taking additional risk. Furthermore, we use bivariate portfolio-level analysis and discover that after controlling for MAX effect, the abnormal return of the hedging portfolio is not statistically significant, which demonstrates that lottery demand's influence on stock returns is manifested in the low beta anomaly in China.
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spelling nottingham-711182023-07-25T08:02:16Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/71118/ The low volatility anomaly in Chinese equity market Hong, Zhuoling The most well-known anomaly in finance suggests that there is no trade- off between risk and return. The portfolio of the low volatility stocks provides better returns than the portfolio of the high volatility stocks. The existing literature offers numerous possible explanations for this anomaly. One of the studies from Bali, Cakici, and Whitelaw (2011) demonstrates that investors’ demand for lottery-like stocks is a significant driver of the low beta anomaly and in this research, they introduced a behaviour measure variable "MAX", which represents lottery characteristics. Hence, in this paper, we are going to follow Bali et al. (2011, 2017)'s research and use "MAX" to investigate the demand for lottery-type stocks in explanation of the presence this anomaly in Chinese equity market. The investigation of our study results in the confirmation of the existence of the low beta anomaly in China and this anomaly can be explained by lottery characteristic. The accumulated excess returns over the observation period for the hedging portfolio is 80.55 percent, which indicates that investors cannot gain an additional return by taking additional risk. Furthermore, we use bivariate portfolio-level analysis and discover that after controlling for MAX effect, the abnormal return of the hedging portfolio is not statistically significant, which demonstrates that lottery demand's influence on stock returns is manifested in the low beta anomaly in China. 2023-07-23 Dissertation (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/71118/2/Dissertation.pdf Hong, Zhuoling (2023) The low volatility anomaly in Chinese equity market. [Dissertation (University of Nottingham only)] CAPM; low volatility anomaly; low beta anomaly; MAX effect; lottery effect; China
spellingShingle CAPM; low volatility anomaly; low beta anomaly; MAX effect; lottery effect; China
Hong, Zhuoling
The low volatility anomaly in Chinese equity market
title The low volatility anomaly in Chinese equity market
title_full The low volatility anomaly in Chinese equity market
title_fullStr The low volatility anomaly in Chinese equity market
title_full_unstemmed The low volatility anomaly in Chinese equity market
title_short The low volatility anomaly in Chinese equity market
title_sort low volatility anomaly in chinese equity market
topic CAPM; low volatility anomaly; low beta anomaly; MAX effect; lottery effect; China
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/71118/