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Linear beta pricing models: cross-sectional regression tests

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Fama-MacBeth two-pass cross-sectional regression methodology ... So in general the Fama-MacBeth standard errors are incorrect because of the ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Linear beta pricing models: cross-sectional regression tests


1
Linear beta pricing modelscross-sectional
regression tests
  • FINA790C
  • Spring 2006 HKUST

2
Motivation
  • The F test and ML likelihood ratio test are not
    without drawbacks
  • We need T gt N To solve this we could form
    portfolios (but this is not without problems)
  • When the model is rejected we dont know why
    (e.g. do expected returns depend on factor
    loadings or on characteristics?)

3
Cross-sectional regression
  • Can we use the information from the whole
    cross-section of stock returns to test linear
    beta pricing models?
  • Fama-MacBeth two-pass cross-sectional regression
    methodology
  • Estimate each assets beta from time-series
    regression
  • Cross-sectional regression of asset returns on
    constant, betas (and possibly other
    characteristics)
  • Run cross-sectional regressions each period,
    average coefficients over time

4
Linear beta pricing model
  • At time t the returns on the N securities are Rt
    R1t R2t RNt with variance matrix ?R
  • Let ft f1t fKt be the vector of time-t
    values taken by the K factors with variance
    matrix ?f
  • The linear beta pricing model is ERit ?0
    ?ßi for i1, ,N or
  • ERt ?01 B?
  • where B E(Rt-E(Rt))(ft-E(ft))?f

5
Return generating process
  • From the definition of B the time series for Rt
    is
  • Rt ERt B( ft-E(ft) ) ut
  • with Eut 0 and Eutft 0NxK
  • Imposing linear beta pricing model gives
  • Rt ?01 B(ft-E(ft)?) ut

6
CSR methoddescription
  • Define ? ?0 ? ( (K1)x1 vector ) and
  • X 1 B ( N x (K1) matrix )
  • Assume N gt K and rank(X) K1
  • Then ERt 1 B ?0 ? X ?

7
CSR first pass
  • In first step we estimate ?f and B through usual
    estimators
  • ?f (1/T)?(ftµf)(ftµf)
  • µf (1/T) ?ft
  • B (1/T)?(RtµR)(ftµf)?f-1
  • µR (1/T) ?Rt
  • In practice we can use rolling estimation period
    prior to testing period

8
CSR - second pass
  • In second step, for each t 1, , T we use the
    estimate B of the beta matrix and do
    cross-sectional regression of returns on
    estimated B
  • ? (XQX)1XQRt (for feasible GLS with
  • weighting matrix Q)
  • where X 1 B
  • The time-series average is
  • ? (1/T)?(XQX)1XQRt
  • (XQX)1XQ µR

9
Fama-MacBeth OLS
  • Fama-MacBeth set Q IN and
  • ?OLS (XX)1XRt
  • The time-series average is
  • ?OLS (XX)1XµR
  • And the variance of ?OLS is given by
  • (1/T) ? (?OLS - ?OLS )(?OLS - ?OLS )

10
Issues in CSR methodology
  • Dont observe true beta B, but measured B with
    error what is effect on sampling distribution of
    estimates?
  • How is CSR methodology related to maximum
    likelihood methodology?

11
Sampling distribution of ?
  • Let D (XQX)-1XQ, X 1 B
  • Basic Result If (Rt, ft) is stationary and
    serially independent then under standard
    assumptions, as T?8, vT(? - ?) converges in
    distribution to a multivariate normal with mean
    zero and covariance
  • V D?RD D?D - D(G G)D

12
Where does V come from?
  • Write µR X? (µR - E(Rt)) (B-B)?
  • So vT( ? - ?)
  • (XQX)-1XQ vT(µR - E(Rt))
  • - (XQX)-1XQ vT(B - B) ?
  • Error in estimating ? comes from
  • Using average rather than expected returns
  • Using estimated rather than true betas

13
Comparing V to Fama-MacBeth variance estimator
  • From the definition of ?OLS its asymptotic
    variance is
  • (XX) -1X?RX(XX)-1 D?RD
  • So in general the Fama-MacBeth standard errors
    are incorrect because of the errors-in-variables
    problem

14
Special case conditional homoscedasticity of
residuals given factors
  • Suppose we also assume that conditional on values
    of the factors ft, the time-series regression
    residuals ut have zero expectation, constant
    covariance ?U and are serially uncorrelated
  • This will hold if (Rt, ft) is iid and jointly
    multivariate normal

15
Asymptotic variance for special case
  • Recall ? ?0 ? ( (K1)x1 vector ) and define
    the (K1)x(K1) bordered matrix
  • ?f 0 0K
  • 0K ?f
  • Then Basic Result holds with
  • V ?f (1 ??f-1?)D?UD
  • Asymptotically valid standard errors are
    obtained by substituting consistent extimates for
    the various parameters

16
Example Sharpe-Lintner-Black CAPM
  • For k1, this simplifies to
  • The usual Fama-MacBeth variance estimator
    (ignoring estimation error in betas) understates
    the correct variance except under the null
    hypothesis that ?1 (market risk premium) 0

17
Maximum likelihood and two-pass CSR
  • MLE estimates B and ? simultaneously and thereby
    solves the errors-in-variables problem.
  • Asymptotic covariance matrix of the two-pass
    cross-sectional regression GLS estimator ? is
    the same as that for MLE
  • I.e. two-pass GLS is consistent and
    asymptotically efficient as T?8

18
Two-pass GLS
  • For given T, as N ?8 however, the two-pass GLS
    estimator still suffers from an
    errors-in-variables problem from using B (i.e.
    two-pass GLS is not N-consistent)
  • We can make the two-pass GLS estimator
    N-consistent as well through a simple
    modification (see Litzenberger and Ramaswamy
    (1979), Shanken (1992))

19
Modified two-pass CSR
  • For example Sharpe-Lintner-Black CAPM estimated
    with two-pass OLS
  • The errors-in-variable problem applies to betas,
    or the lower right-hand block of XX. Note
    that
  • E(ßß) ßß tr(?U)/(TsM2)
  • So deduct the last term from the lower-right hand
    block this adjustment corrects for the EIV
    problem as N ?8.
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