Abstract
This paper studies in depth the sensitivity of Spanish companies’ returns to changes in several risk factors between January 2000 and December 2018 using the quantile regression approach. Concretely, this research applies extensions of the Fama and French three- and five-factor models (1993 and 2015), according to González and Jareño (2019), adding relevant explanatory factors, such as nominal interest rates, the Carhart (1997) risk factor for momentum and for momentum reversal and the Pastor and Stambaugh (2003) traded liquidity factor. Additionally, for robustness, this paper splits the entire sample period into three sub-sample periods (pre-crisis, crisis and post-crisis) to analyse the results according to the economic cycle. The main conclusions of this paper are fourfold: First, these two models have the greatest explanatory power in the extreme quantiles of the return distribution (0.1 and 0.9) and more specifically in the lowest quantile 0.1. Second, the second model, based on the Fama and French five-factor model, shows the highest explanatory power not only in the full period but also in the three sub-periods. Third, the bank BBVA is the company that shows the highest sensitivity to changes in the explanatory factors in most periods because its adjusted R2 is the highest. Fourth, the stage of the economy with the highest explanatory power is the crisis subperiod. Thus, the final conclusion of this paper is that the second model explains best variations in Spanish companies’ returns in crisis stages and low quantiles.
Highlights
We live in a globalized world in which many companies and agents invest in financial markets.The problem lies in the uncertainty associated with these investments and the likelihood that security yields will increase or decrease, affecting their liquidity
This research studies which models best explain the sensitivity of stock market prices to variations in the risk factors analysed in this paper
This paper analyses the consistency of the extensions of the Fama and French three- and five-factor models [1,2,3,4] in the Spanish stock market, approximated through the IBEX-35 market index
Summary
The problem lies in the uncertainty associated with these investments and the likelihood that security yields will increase or decrease, affecting their liquidity These variations may be due to numerous factors, such as interest and inflation rates. The aim of this paper is to study the returns of the Spanish companies that currently comprise this index and their variation in response to changes in the risk factors proposed in the aforementioned extensions of the Fama and French models. For robustness, we split our sample period into three subperiods—precrisis, crisis and postcrisis—as the scenario changes according to the economic cycle. This analysis allows us to make a robust contrast of the results found in the estimates for the entire
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