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Higher moments and US industry returns: realized skewness and kurtosis

Xiaoyue Chen (Department of Accounting, Finance, and Economics, Griffith University, Nathan, Australia)
Bin Li (Department of Accounting, Finance, and Economics, Griffith University, Nathan, Australia)
Andrew C. Worthington (Department of Accounting, Finance, and Economics, Griffith University, Nathan, Australia)

Review of Accounting and Finance

ISSN: 1475-7702

Article publication date: 29 March 2021

Issue publication date: 29 July 2021

372

Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to examine the relationships between the higher moments of returns (realized skewness and kurtosis) and subsequent returns at the industry level, with a focus on both empirical predictability and practical application via trading strategies.

Design/methodology/approach

Daily returns for 48 US industries over the period 1970–2019 from Kenneth French’s data library are used to calculate the higher moments and to construct short- and medium-term single-sort trading strategies. The analysis adjusts returns for common risk factors (market, size, value, investment, profitability and illiquidity) to confirm whether conventional asset pricing models can capture these relationships.

Findings

Past skewness positively relates to subsequent industry returns and this relationship is unexplained by common risk factors. There is also a time-varying effect in which the predictive role of skewness is much stronger over business cycle expansions than recessions, a result consistent with varying investor optimism. However, there is no significant relationship between kurtosis and subsequent industry returns. The analysis confirms robustness using both value- and equal-weighted returns.

Research limitations/implications

The calculation of realized moments conventionally uses high-frequency intra-day data, regrettably unavailable for industries. In addition, the chosen portfolio-sorting method may omit some information, as it compares only average group returns. Nonetheless, the close relationship between skewness and future returns at the industry level suggests variations in returns unexplained by common risk factors. This enriches knowledge of market anomalies and questions yet again weak-form market efficiency and the validity of conventional asset pricing models. One suggestion is that it is possible to significantly improve the existing multi-factor asset pricing models by including industry skewness as a risk factor.

Practical implications

Given the relationship between skewness and future returns at the industry level, investors may predict subsequent industry returns to select better-performing funds. They may even construct trading strategies based on return distributions that would generate abnormal returns. Further, as the evaluation of individual stocks also contains industry information, and stocks in industries with better performance earn higher returns, risks related to industry return distributions can also shed light on individual stock picking.

Originality/value

While there is abundant evidence of the relationships between higher moments and future returns at the firm level, there is little at the industry level. Further, by testing whether there is time variation in the relationship between industry higher moments and future returns, the paper yields novel evidence concerning the asymmetric effect of stock return predictability over business cycles. Finally, the analysis supplements firm-level results focusing only on the decomposed components of higher moments.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The authors would like to thank anonymous reviewers and the editor for their helpful comments and suggestions.

Citation

Chen, X., Li, B. and Worthington, A.C. (2020), "Higher moments and US industry returns: realized skewness and kurtosis", Review of Accounting and Finance, Vol. 20 No. 1, pp. 1-22. https://doi.org/10.1108/RAF-06-2020-0171

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2021, Emerald Publishing Limited

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