Abstract

Perspective on behavioral finance, we take a new look at the characteristics of investors’ risk preference, building the D-GARCH-M model, DR-GARCH-M model, and GARCHC-M model to investigate their changes with states of gain and loss and values of return together with other time-varying characteristics of investors’ risk preference. Based on a full description of risk preference characteristic, we develop a GARCHCS-M model to study its effect on the return skewness. The top ten market value stock composite indexes from Global Stock Exchange in 2012 are adopted to make the empirical analysis. The results show that investors are risk aversion when they gain and risk seeking when they lose, which effectively explains the inconsistent risk-return relationship. Moreover, the degree of risk aversion rises with the increasing gain and that of risk seeking improves with the increasing losses. Meanwhile, we find that investors’ inherent risk preference in most countries displays risk seeking, and their current risk preference is influenced by last period’s risk preference and disturbances. At last, investors’ risk preferences affect the conditional skewness; specifically, their risk aversion makes return skewness reduce, while risk seeking makes the skewness increase.

Highlights

  • Risk preference refers to the attitude people hold towards risks, which is a key factor in studies on investors’ decisionmaking behavior

  • We first make a research on the relationship between risk and return using GARHC-M model, go on to investigate the change of the risk preference under investors’ different states with the D-GARCH-M model designed in this paper, and make a comparison with results of the two models

  • We show the results of GARHC-M model and D-GARCH-M model both with and without constant term as well as the error term in different distribution, which are shown in Tables 2 and 3

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Summary

Introduction

Risk preference refers to the attitude people hold towards risks, which is a key factor in studies on investors’ decisionmaking behavior. Empirical evidence of Bae et al [17] indicated that the distribution of return skewness would change with different corporate governance performances These studies about the cause of skewed distribution were made mainly from macroscopic perspective, while with the development of behavioral financial theory, an increasing number of scholars came to consider the impact of investors’ risk preference and behavioral biases on the skewness of return distribution from microscopic perspective. Based on the above studies, this paper maintains that investors’ risk preference is, on the one hand, time-varying under the influences of the states of gain and loss, the value of return, and other factors (last period’s risk preference and disturbance).

Model Analysis
Demonstration and Result Analysis
Estimation Results
Robustness Test
Conclusion
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