Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
964021 Journal of International Financial Markets, Institutions and Money 2013 12 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Firm characteristics are able to explain the differences in idiosyncratic risk across securities.•But firm characteristics are rarely able to predict future idiosyncratic risk of a given security.•Conclusions are robust to alternative specifications of idiosyncratic risk, security samples, and time periods.

We investigate the effects of several firm characteristics utilized in the recent literature to account for puzzling dynamics of idiosyncratic risk. Our results suggest that these characteristics (book-to-market, leverage, size, institutional ownership, earnings-per-share, and turnover) are able to explain well the differences in idiosyncratic risk across securities. On the other hand, the characteristics appear to be poor predictors of the fluctuations in idiosyncratic risk of a given security over time. About 80% of the securities in our sample do not have a significant relationship between any of the considered characteristics and idiosyncratic risk at security level. These results suggest that firm characteristics can be used in the analysis of the differences in risk across securities, such as portfolio composition. However, the characteristics do not appear useful in the analysis of security risk dynamics, for example, monitoring portfolio risk over time. These conclusions are robust to alternative specifications of idiosyncratic risk, security samples, and time periods.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Economics, Econometrics and Finance Economics and Econometrics
Authors
,