Risk and Return: A Revisit Using Expected Returns.
This paper uses direct estimates of expected returns to examine the link between standard measures of financial risk and investor return requirements. The results show that systematic risk commands a significant positive risk premium, much larger than found using historical returns as proxies for expectations. Furthermore, there are nonlinearities in the relationship between risk and return. Finally, we show that expected returns and risk premiums in the equity markets change over time and that these changes are related to changes in interest rates on U.S. government obligations. Copyright 1993 by MIT Press.
Year of publication: |
1993
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Authors: | Marston, Felicia ; Harris, Robert S |
Published in: |
The Financial Review. - Eastern Finance Association - EFA. - Vol. 28.1993, 1, p. 117-37
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Publisher: |
Eastern Finance Association - EFA |
Saved in:
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