Consider a firm whose stock returns are affected by market returns and an idiosyncratic market-orthogonal factor. The level of the firm’s cash flows depends on the level of the market and the level of the idiosyncratic factor multiplicatively because of compounding. Although a large hedge against the market index minimizes the variance of cash flows, such a hedge does not minimize the costs of financial distress associated with low cash flow realizations below a debt threshold. A hedge ratio based on asset-rate-of-return regression estimates is then incorrect. This holds even in continuous time and with dynamic hedging policies. Our paper provides a simple heuristic for corporations wishing to hedge out the adverse consequences of market risk.
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21 December 2016
Research Article|
December 21 2016
How Should Firms Hedge Market Risk? Available to Purchase
Bhagwan Chowdhry;
Bhagwan Chowdhry
University of California
, Los Angeles, Anderson School of Management, USA
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Eduardo Schwartz
Eduardo Schwartz
University of California
, Los Angeles, Anderson School of Management, USA
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We thank Jeremy Stein, René Stulz (who also told us about Fischer Black’s critique), and Ivo Welch for many insightful conversations. We also thank seminar participants at UCLA Anderson brown-bag seminar series and at the UCLA-Lugano Finance Conference. We thank anonymous referees for many useful comments, and are deeply grateful to one who helped provide the analytical proof for the main result in the paper.
Online ISSN: 2164-5760
Print ISSN: 2164-5744
© 2016 B. Chowdhry and E. Schwartz
2016
B. Chowdhry and E. Schwartz
Licensed re-use rights only
Critical Finance Review (2016) 5 (2): 399–415.
Citation
Chowdhry B, Schwartz E (2016), "How Should Firms Hedge Market Risk?". Critical Finance Review, Vol. 5 No. 2 pp. 399–415, doi: https://doi.org/10.1561/104.00000023
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