Abstract

This work analyzes whether the relationship between risk and returns predicted by the Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM) is valid in the Brazilian stock market. The analysis is based on discrete wavelet decomposition on different time scales. This technique allows to analyze the relationship between different time horizons, since the short-term ones (2 to 4 days) up to the long-term ones (64 to 128 days). The results indicate that there is a negative or null relationship between systemic risk and returns for Brazil from 2004 to 2007. As the average excess return of a market portfolio in relation to a risk-free asset during that period was positive, it would be expected this relationship to be positive. That is, higher systematic risk should result in higher excess returns, which did not occur. Therefore, during that period, appropriate compensation for systemic risk was not observed in the Brazilian market. The scales that proved to be most significant to the risk-return relation were the first three, which corresponded to short-term time horizons. When treating differently, year-by-year, and consequently separating positive and negative premiums, some relevance is found, during some years, in the risk/return relation predicted by the CAPM. However, this pattern did not persist throughout the years. Therefore, there is not any evidence strong enough confirming that the asset pricing follows the model.

Highlights

  • One of the most often used models in modern finance is the Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM) developed by Sharpe (1964) and Lintner (1965)

  • The CAPM predicts that the investor only prices the systemic risk, which is measured by the share’s beta, and the investor demands a risk premium equal to the beta multiplied by the market portfolio risk premium

  • This work presents the results of the multi-scale decomposition of the assets listed in Bovespa between 2004 and 2007, using the method proposed by Gençay et al (2003), with the goal of studying the relationship between systemic risk and returns for different time scales

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Summary

Introduction

One of the most often used models in modern finance is the Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM) developed by Sharpe (1964) and Lintner (1965). The risk-return relation predicted by the CAPM is widely used to estimate the rate of return demanded to adequately reward the risk that the shareholder assumes. It serves as a benchmark for the minimum required rate of return for implementing a project and is used to determine the fair value of assets. This relation is based on a theoretical market portfolio that is unobserved. Market indexes are used as proxies for the theoretical portfolio to estimate the share’s betas

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