Long-term Verification of Low Volatility Stock Investment
We verify the long-term performance of low-volatility stocks in the stock markets around the world. A reliable observation becomes possible on the respective stock markets in the United States from the 1920s, in Japan from the 50s and in other developed countries from the 70s, as we use indices by industry, instead of individual stocks. From the results of our verification, it is observed that low-volatility stock portfolios such as minimum variance portfolios show higher risk-adjusted returns in the long run than the market-value-weighted indices in almost all markets. The spread of returns between the above-mentioned two are broken into two parts; the low-volatility effect, which means that low-volatility stocks produce higher risk-adjustment returns in the future than high-volatility stocks, and the non-market capitalization weighted effect, which means that the more closely the price fluctuations of certain stocks are corresponding to the market-value-weighted indices, the lower their future performances are. More specifically, it seems that low-volatility stock portfolios realize a relatively high performance by holding many low-volatility stocks without weighting them by market value.
Year of publication: |
2013
|
---|---|
Authors: | Toru, Toru Yamada |
Published in: |
Public Policy Review. - Policy Research Institute. - Vol. 9.2013, 3, p. 553-574
|
Publisher: |
Policy Research Institute |
Subject: | portfolio management | equity strategy | low-volatility effect | minimum variance portfolio | non-market capitalization weighted |
Saved in:
Saved in favorites
Similar items by subject
-
Long-term verification of low volatility stock investment
Yamada, Toru, (2013)
-
Optimal hedging with the Vector Autoregressive model
Gatarek, Lukasz, (2014)
-
Covariance prediction in large portfolio allocation
TrucĂos, Carlos, (2019)
- More ...