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Motivated by Bali et al. (2011) and Ang et al. (2006 & 2009), we examine the cross-sectional relationship between the expected stock return and both the maximum daily return (MAX) and the idiosyncratic volatility (IVOL) in the five largest emerging African stock markets over the period from 2001...
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We investigate the time series behavior of idiosyncratic volatility and its role in asset pricing in China. We find no evidence of a long-term trend in the time series behavior of idiosyncratic volatility. Idiosyncratic volatility in China is best characterized by an autoregressive process with...
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We investigate the significance of extreme positive returns (MAX) in the cross- sectional pricing of stocks in South Korea. Our results provide important out of sample evidence of a strong negative MAX effect similar to that documented by Bali et al., (2011) in the U.S. stock market. For...
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Recent evidence in the U.S. and Europe indicates that stocks with high maximum daily returns in the previous month, perform poorly in the current month. We investigate the presence of a similar effect in the emerging Chinese stock markets with portfolio-level analysis and firm-level Fama-MacBeth...
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Motivated by Huang et al.'s (2013) recent arguments, we empirically examine the risk-return tradeoff in a liberalized emerging stock market, Vietnam during 2007 to 2014. We find that: i) neither realized idiosyncratic volatility nor conditional idiosyncratic volatility has been priced; ii) both the...
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