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Empirical Financial Economics

Empirical Financial Economics. Asset pricing and Mean Variance Efficiency. Eigenvalues and Eigenvectors. Eigenvalues and eigenvectors satisfy Eigenvectors diagonalize covariance matrix. Normal Distribution results. Basic result used in univariate tests:.

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Empirical Financial Economics

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  1. Empirical Financial Economics Asset pricing and Mean Variance Efficiency

  2. Eigenvalues and Eigenvectors • Eigenvalues and eigenvectors satisfy • Eigenvectors diagonalize covariance matrix

  3. Normal Distribution results • Basic result used in univariate tests:

  4. Multivariate Normal results • Direct extension to multivariate case:

  5. Mean variance facts

  6. The geometry of mean variance Note: returns are in excess of the risk free rate

  7. Tests of Mean Variance Efficiency • Mean variance efficiency implies CAPM • For Normal with mean and covariance matrix , is distributed as noncentral Chi Square with degrees of freedom and noncentrality

  8. MacBeth T2 test • Regress excess return on market excess return • Define orthogonal return • Market efficiency implies , estimate .

  9. MacBeth T2 test (continued) • The T2 test statistic is distributed as noncentral Chi Square with m degrees of freedom and noncentrality parameter • The quadratic form is interpreted as the Sharpe ratio of the optimal orthogonal portfolio • This is interpreted as a test of Mean Variance Efficiency • Gibbons Ross and Shanken adjust for unknown Gibbons, M, S. Ross and J. Shanken, 1989 A test of the efficiency of a given portfolio Econometrica 57, 1121-1152

  10. The geometry of mean variance Note: returns are in excess of the risk free rate

  11. Multiple period consumption-investment problem • Multiperiod problem: • First order conditions: • Stochastic discount factor interpretation:

  12. Stochastic discount factor and the asset pricing model • If there is a risk free asset: • which yields the basic pricing relationship

  13. Stochastic discount factor and mean variance efficiency • Consider the regression model • The coefficients are proportional to the negative of minimum variance portfolio weights, so

  14. The geometry of mean variance Note: returns are in excess of the risk free rate

  15. Hansen Jagannathan Bounds • Risk aversion times standard deviation of consumption is given by: • “Equity premium puzzle”: Sharpe ratio of market implies a risk aversion coefficient of about 50 • Consider

  16. Non negative discount factors • Negative discount rates possible when market returns are high • Consider a positive discount rate constraint:

  17. Stochastic discount factor and the asset pricing model • If there is a risk free asset: • which yields the basic pricing relationship

  18. Where does m come from? • Stein’s lemma • If the vector ft+1and rt+1are jointly Normal • Taylor series expansion • Linear term: CAPM, higher order terms? • Put option payoff

  19. Multivariate Asset Pricing • Consider • Unconditional means are given by • Model for observations is

  20. Principal Factors • Single factor case • Define factor in terms of returns • What factor maximizes explained variance? • Satisfied by with criterion equal to

  21. Principal Factors • Multiple factor case • Covariance matrix • Define and the first columns • Then • This is the “principal factor” solution • Factor analysis seeks to diagonalize • Satisfied by with criterion equal to

  22. Importance of the largest eigenvalue

  23. The Economy What does it mean to randomly select security i? Restrictive? Harding, M., 2008 Explaining the single factor bias of arbitrage pricing models in finite samples Economics Letters 99, 85-88.

  24. k Equally important factors • Each factor is priced and contributes equally (on average) to variance: • Eigenvalues are given by

  25. Important result • The larger the number of equally important factors, the more certain would a casual empirical investigator be there was only one factor!

  26. Numerical example

  27. What are the factors? • Where W is the Helmert rotation: The average is one and the remaining average to zero

  28. Implications for pricing • Regress returns on factor loadings • Suppose k factors are priced: • Only one factor will appear to be priced!

  29. Application of Principal Components Yield curve factors: level, slope and curvature

  30. A more interesting example Yield curve factors: level, slope and curvature

  31. Application of Principal Components Procedure: Estimate B* using principal components Choose an orthogonal rotation to minimize a function that penalizes departures from

  32. Conclusion • Mean variance efficiency and asset pricing • Important role of Sharpe ratio • Implicit assumption of Multivariate Normality • Limitations of data driven approach

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