The seminal study by Fama and MacBeth in 1973 initiated a stream of papers testing for the cross-sectional relation between return and risk. The debate as to whether beta is a valid measure of risk was reanimated by Fama and French and subsequent studies. Rather than focusing on exogenous variables that have a larger explanatory power than an asset's beta in cross-sectional tests, the matrix of variances-covariances is assumed to follow a time varying ARCH process. Using monthly data from the UK market from February 1975 to December 1996, the cross-sectional return-risk relations obtained with an unconditional specification for assets' betas are compared to those obtained when the estimated betas are based on an ARCH model. The approach tak...
This paper provides new evidence about two questions that have been investigated separately in the l...
Abstract This paper examines the conditional risk-return relationship caused by the impact o...
This paper analyses the ability of beta and other factors, like firm size and book-to-market, to exp...
The seminal study by Fama and MacBeth (1973) initiated a stream of papers testing for the cross-sect...
This study examines the conditional relationship between beta and return for stocks traded on S&P 50...
This paper presents an innovative approach in examining the conditional relationship between beta an...
Traditional tests of the CAPM following the Fama / MacBeth (1973) procedure are tests of the joint h...
This paper examines the role of beta, size and book-to-market equity as competing risk measurements ...
This paper examines the role of beta in explaining security returns in the UK stock market over the ...
In this study I suggest some evidence that the popular cross-sectional asset pricing test proposed b...
This study tests the validity of using the CAPM beta as a risk control in cross-sectional accounting...
This paper will follow Pettengill et al.’s (1995) approach to examine the unconditional and conditi...
Unlike previous studies, this paper finds a consistent and highly significant relationship between b...
Unlike previous studies, this paper finds a consistent and highly significant relationship between b...
A number of authors have found that firm size and book-to-market-value capture the cross-sectional v...
This paper provides new evidence about two questions that have been investigated separately in the l...
Abstract This paper examines the conditional risk-return relationship caused by the impact o...
This paper analyses the ability of beta and other factors, like firm size and book-to-market, to exp...
The seminal study by Fama and MacBeth (1973) initiated a stream of papers testing for the cross-sect...
This study examines the conditional relationship between beta and return for stocks traded on S&P 50...
This paper presents an innovative approach in examining the conditional relationship between beta an...
Traditional tests of the CAPM following the Fama / MacBeth (1973) procedure are tests of the joint h...
This paper examines the role of beta, size and book-to-market equity as competing risk measurements ...
This paper examines the role of beta in explaining security returns in the UK stock market over the ...
In this study I suggest some evidence that the popular cross-sectional asset pricing test proposed b...
This study tests the validity of using the CAPM beta as a risk control in cross-sectional accounting...
This paper will follow Pettengill et al.’s (1995) approach to examine the unconditional and conditi...
Unlike previous studies, this paper finds a consistent and highly significant relationship between b...
Unlike previous studies, this paper finds a consistent and highly significant relationship between b...
A number of authors have found that firm size and book-to-market-value capture the cross-sectional v...
This paper provides new evidence about two questions that have been investigated separately in the l...
Abstract This paper examines the conditional risk-return relationship caused by the impact o...
This paper analyses the ability of beta and other factors, like firm size and book-to-market, to exp...