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Theory-based Empirical Asset Pricing

Subject Area Accounting and Finance
Term since 2021
Project identifier Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 454790565
 
How do risk premia for financial assets vary over time and across states of the world? How does this variation affect the behavior of asset prices over time and differences across assets? While these questions are not new in asset pricing research, the aim of the proposed scientific network is to promote theory-based empirical research in the field of cross-sectional asset pricing. As a result, we expect new insights into the sources of risk premia that go beyond their mere statistical description, which previous and current asset pricing research has often focused on. Since the seminal article by Fama and French (1992), the empirical asset pricing literature has been dominated by studies that statistically demonstrate alleged relations between stock or firm characteristics and unconditional expected returns in the cross-section of stocks. This approach is problematic for two reasons. First, empirical tests should always start with a clear hypothesis derived from economic theory, which allows a clear interpretation of the test results. However, the majority of empirical asset pricing papers lack this theoretical foundation. Instead, papers often define statistical factors and argue that these factors must be related to the marginal utility of investors, without giving a theoretical justification. Second, due to the lack of theoretical discipline in the derivation of testable hypotheses, research has largely focused on screening the data for regularities and correlations between stock characteristics and subsequent returns. Harvey, Liu, and Zhu (2016) have coined the term “factor zoo” and conclude that the usual criteria for statistical inference no longer applied, since empirical asset pricing research had put itself in a multiple testing environment. The approach of our network is to eschew the roots of this statistical problem. The aim is to search specifically for implications from asset pricing theory regarding the cross-section of expected stock returns and to translate these into clear-cut testable hypotheses. Since large parts of the empirical literature test unconditional factor models, but asset pricing models often implyconditional factor models (i.e., models with time-varying risk premia), sophisticated econometric methods will be necessary to bring the testable hypothesis to the data. In order to advance asset pricing research in this direction, it is necessary to gain an integral view of the research question discussed above. To this end, the network is supposed to bring together researchers in the field of asset pricing with special expertise in theory, empirics, and econometric methods. It serves as a forum to stimulate collaboration between researchers from these different areas.
DFG Programme Scientific Networks
 
 

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