Is VIX a Contrarian Indicator? On the Positivity of the Conditional Sharpe Ratio <sup>†</sup>

The notion of compensation for systematic risk is well ingrained in finance and constitutes the basis for numerous empirical tests. The concept an increase in systematic risk is accompanied by an increase in the required risk premium has strong intuitive content: The more risk there is to be borne,...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ehud I. Ronn, Liying Xu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2025-04-01
Series:Econometrics
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Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2225-1146/13/2/18
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Summary:The notion of compensation for systematic risk is well ingrained in finance and constitutes the basis for numerous empirical tests. The concept an increase in systematic risk is accompanied by an increase in the required risk premium has strong intuitive content: The more risk there is to be borne, the greater the compensation therefor. In recognizing previous research on the ex ante and ex post reward to risk, the thrust of this paper is to augment those previous tests of expected and realized returns by providing several distinct empirical tests of the proposition the market rewards the undertaking of systematic equity risk, the latter as measured by the VIX volatility index. Thus, in this paper’s empirical section, we use several empirical approaches to answer the question, Using realized returns, is an increase in systematic risk VIX accompanied by an increase in the equity risk premium? While the empirical results are not always statistically significant, our answer is in the affirmative.
ISSN:2225-1146