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An Unconditional Asset‐Pricing Test and the Role of Firm Size as an Instrumental Variable for Risk
246
Citations
31
References
1988
Year
Empirical FinanceStock BetaFinancial Risk ManagementLong Time PeriodsApplied EconometricsAsset AllocationPortfolio ManagementFirm SizeFirm‐size ProxyTime Series EconometricsAsset PricingInstrumental VariableManagementEconomic AnalysisFinancial EconometricsEconomicsAccountingFinanceFinancial EconomicsUnconditional Asset‐pricing TestEconometricsBusinessIntertemporal Portfolio Choice
ABSTRACT In an intertemporal economy where both risk (stock beta) and expected return are time varying, the authors derive a linear relation between the unconditional beta and the unconditional return under certain stationarity assumptions about the stochastic process of size‐portfolio betas. The model suggests the use of long time periods to estimate the unconditional portfolio betas. The authors find that, after controlling for the betas thus estimated, a firm‐size proxy, such as the logarithm of the firm size, does not have explanatory power for the averaged returns across the size‐ranked portfolios.
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