Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8954550 | Finance Research Letters | 2018 | 24 Pages |
Abstract
We employ low-frequency data to estimate historical volatility measures for Hong Kong stocks and examine the relationship between these measures and the one-month ahead stock return over thirty-five years. First, we employ a stock's past three-year weekly return to compute idiosyncratic volatility. Second, we use a stock's past three-year maximum weekly return to create a MAX measure. We find that both IVOL and MAX are significant and negatively related to the one-month ahead stock return. Both effects co-exist in the Hong Kong stock markets and are robust after controlling for the financial crisis, January effect, and tiny stocks.
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Authors
Christopher Gan, Gilbert V. Nartea, Jiâ(George) Wu,