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Tradable or nontradable factors: what does the Hansen–Jagannathan distance tell us?
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Tradable or nontradable factors: what does the Hansen–Jagannathan distance tell us?

Xiang Zhang, Yangyi Liu, Kun Wu and Bertrand Maillet
International Review of Economics & Finance, pp.853-879
01/01/2021

Abstract

Tradable and nontradable factors Hansen–Jagannathan distance Misspecification errors Factors mimicking portfolios
We investigate the difference in pricing cross-sectional risky assets performance between tradable and nontradable factors by comparing their misspecification errors—the Hansen–Jagannathan (HJ) distance. By constructing nontradable factors mimicking portfolios (FMPs) and incorporating them into the least-misspecified tradable stochastic dis-count factor (SDF), we provide cross-country empirical evidence that this SDF that combines tradable and nontradable factors dominates others in which nontradable factors further decrease the SDF’s mis-specification errors. Since nontradable FMPs are functions of current tradable factor information about the economic state, FMPs “hedge” the state variable risks, and FMPs’ returns describe the risk premiums.
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https://doi.org/10.1016/j.iref.2020.10.013View
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Domestic collaboration
International collaboration
Citation topics
6 Social Sciences
6.10 Economics
6.10.80 Market Interdependencies
Web of Science research areas
Business, Finance
Economics
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