This study successfully replicates the key findings of Campbell et al. (2001). We document that aggregate idiosyncratic volatility increases over their sample period from 1962 to 1997. In out-of-sample analysis from 1926 to 1962 and 1998 to 2017, we find that idiosyncratic volatility (IV) decreases, suggesting that their finding is sample-specific. We compare their measure of IV with those obtained from models such as the Fama and French (1993) three-factor model and find that they are very similar. The Campbell et al. (2001) volatility measures can only be estimated at the aggregate level. An advantage of asset pricing model-based IVs is that they can be estimated at the stock level. Employing these stock-level IV measures, we examine trends in a variety of IV series and how IV relates to commonly analyzed firm characteristics. In doing so, we provide further insight into IV and its time-series trends.
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8 August 2023
Research Article|
August 08 2023
Has Idiosyncratic Volatility Increased? Not in Recent Times Available to Purchase
Mardy Chiah;
Mardy Chiah
Newcastle Business School,
University of Newcastle
, Australia
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Philip Gharghori;
Philip Gharghori
Monash Business School,
Monash University
, Australia
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Angel Zhong
Angel Zhong
School of Economics, Finance and Marketing,
RMIT University
, Australia
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We are grateful to an anonymous referee and the guest editor, Juhani Linnainmaa, for helpful comments.
Online ISSN: 2164-5760
Print ISSN: 2164-5744
© 2023 Mardy Chiah,Philip Gharghori and Angel Zhong
2023
Mardy Chiah,Philip Gharghori and Angel Zhong
Licensed re-use rights only
Critical Finance Review (2023) 12 (1-4): 125–170.
Citation
Chiah M, Gharghori P, Zhong A (2023), "Has Idiosyncratic Volatility Increased? Not in Recent Times". Critical Finance Review, Vol. 12 No. 1-4 pp. 125–170, doi: https://doi.org/10.1561/104.00000127
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