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6 Ergebnisse
Ergebnisse nach Hochschule und Institut
Publikation Potential of venture capital in the European Union(Policy Department Economic and Scientific Policy, European Parliament, 2012) Tykvová, Tereza; Borell, Mariela; Kröncke, Tim05 - Forschungs- oder ArbeitsberichtPublikation International diversification with securitized real estate and the veiling glare from currency risk(Elsevier, 11/2012) Kröncke, Tim; Schindler, FelixThis paper analyzes diversification benefits from international securitized real estate in a mixed-asset context. We apply regression-based mean-variance efficiency tests, conditional on currency-unhedged and fully hedged portfolios to account for systematic foreign exchange movements. From the perspective of a US investor, it is shown that, first, international diversification is superior to a US mixed-asset portfolio, second, adding international real estate to an already internationally diversified stock and bond portfolio results in a further significant improvement of the risk-return trade-off and, third, considering unhedged international assets could lead to biased asset allocation decisions not realizing the true diversification benefits from international assets.01A - Beitrag in wissenschaftlicher ZeitschriftPublikation International diversification benefits with foreign exchange investment styles(Oxford University Press, 08/2014) Kröncke, Tim; Schindler, Felix; Schrimpf, AndreasStyle-based management of the foreign exchange (FX) component of international investments with carry trade, FX momentum, and FX value strategies provides economically large and significant diversification benefits. These speculative benefits go beyond the hedging benefits of FX risk documented in the earlier literature. Our results hold after transaction costs and are confirmed in an extensive out-of-sample experiment mimicking investor decisions in real time. Adding a composite FX style portfolio to diversified allocations of global bonds and stocks leads to a 64% increase in the out-of-sample Sharpe ratio from 0.64 to 1.05, without adverse impact on other portfolio characteristics such as skewness.01A - Beitrag in wissenschaftlicher ZeitschriftPublikation Asset pricing without garbage(Wiley-Blackwell, 2017) Kröncke, TimThis paper provides an explanation for why garbage implies a much lower relative risk aversion in the consumption-based asset pricing model than National Income and Product Accounts (NIPA) consumption expenditure: Unlike garbage, NIPA consumption is filtered to mitigate measurement error. I apply a simple model of the filtering process that allows one to undo the filtering inherent in NIPA consumption. “Unfiltered NIPA consumption” well explains the equity premium and is priced in the cross-section of stock returns. I discuss the likely properties of true consumption (i.e., without measurement error and filtering) and quantify implications for habit and long-run risk models.01A - Beitrag in wissenschaftlicher ZeitschriftPublikation The anatomy of public and private real estate return premia(Springer, 2018) Kröncke, Tim; Schindler, Felix; Steininger, Bertram I.Market-wide, stock market specific, and real estate market specific risk – what kind of risk and to which extent drives the returns of listed real estate? Based on a structural asset pricing model calibrated to the empirical data in the U.S., we show that at least two thirds of the risk premium of listed real estate are driven by the same factors as direct real estate. Our results shed new light on the risk-characteristics of listed real estate returns and are of high interest for academics, regulators, and portfolio managers alike.01A - Beitrag in wissenschaftlicher ZeitschriftPublikation The FOMC risk shift(Elsevier, 2021) Kröncke, Tim; Schmeling, Maik; Schrimpf, AndreasWe identify a component of monetary policy news that is extracted from high-frequency changes in risky asset prices. These surprises, which we call “risk shifts”, are uncorrelated, and therefore complementary, to risk-free rate surprises. We show that (i) risk shifts capture the lion’s share of stock price movements around FOMC announcements; (ii) that they are accompanied by significant investor fund flows, suggesting that investors react heterogeneously to monetary policy news; and (iii) that price pressure amplifies the stock market response to monetary policy news. Our results imply that central bank information effects are overshadowed by short-term dynamics stemming from investor rebalancing activities and are likely to be more difficult to identify than previously thought.01A - Beitrag in wissenschaftlicher Zeitschrift