Author
Listed:
- Jungmu Kim
- Changjun Lee
- Woo-Hyuk Lee
- Youngkyung Ok
- Thuy Thi Thu Truong
Abstract
Purpose - The authors aim to understand the driving forces behind the idiosyncratic volatility puzzle in the Korean stock market. The authors study the Korean stock market because previous works report a strong idiosyncratic volatility puzzle in Korea, and the market for the exchange-traded funds (ETFs) including low volatility ETFs has experienced drastic growth in Korea. Design/methodology/approach - Using common stocks listed either on KOSPI or KOSDAQ over the period 1997–2016, the authors estimate idiosyncratic volatility using the Fama–French three-factor model. In addition, based on prior literature, the authors use turnover as a proxy for overvaluation. The authors then study the role of turnover in understanding the idiosyncratic volatility puzzle in Korea. Findings - The authors find that turnover is highly associated with idiosyncratic volatility. Turnover is extremely large among firms with high idiosyncratic volatility and the puzzle disappears after we control for turnover, meaning that turnover subsumes the explanatory power of idiosyncratic volatility for equity returns. The authors also find underperformance of stocks with high turnover and high idiosyncratic volatility exclusively during earnings announcement periods. Overall, our finding implies that the puzzle arises since high idiosyncratic volatility stocks due to high turnover are overvalued and experience correction afterwards. Originality/value - Literature has suggested explanations based on lottery preferences of investors and market frictions behind the idiosyncratic volatility puzzle. What makes our study distinct from previous work is that we find the role of turnover in understanding the idiosyncratic volatility puzzle using turnover measure as a proxy for overvaluation in the Korean stock market.
Suggested Citation
Jungmu Kim & Changjun Lee & Woo-Hyuk Lee & Youngkyung Ok & Thuy Thi Thu Truong, 2022.
"Idiosyncratic volatility, turnover and the cross-section of stock returns: evidence from the Korean stock market,"
International Journal of Emerging Markets, Emerald Group Publishing Limited, vol. 18(12), pages 6192-6213, May.
Handle:
RePEc:eme:ijoemp:ijoem-09-2021-1499
DOI: 10.1108/IJOEM-09-2021-1499
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JEL classification:
- G12 - Financial Economics - - General Financial Markets - - - Asset Pricing; Trading Volume; Bond Interest Rates
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