EWe propose a capital asset pricing model in which investors exhibit prospect preferences.
In equilibrium, we predict that agents seek an optimal trade-off between expected
returns, variance, and skewness. Specifically, assets with positive coskewness increase
risk in the region of gains (investors are risk-averse), whereas assets with negative
coskewness reduce risk in the region of losses (investors are risk-loving). Using U.S.
stock market data, we find evidence consistent with the above theoretical predictions.
A 1% rise in positive coskewness factor loading leads to 0.42% more stock returns. The
negative coskewness coefficients are also positive and significant. The empirics indicate
a 0.53% return increase for each 1% increase in the negative coskewness factor loading.
In additional tests, we find that the results become stronger among stocks traded by less
sophisticated investors. Overall, the implication is that there is a pervasive impact of
prospect utility in financial markets.
Author Details
Professor of Finance and Head of Research Center of Finance,
Shanghai Business School, China
gaoxiang@sbs.edu.cn