What Makes a Stock Risky? Evidence from Sell-Side Analysts' Risk Ratings

Publication Date

2-2-2005

Abstract

We examine the determinants and the informativeness of financial analysts' risk ratings using a large sample of research reports issued by Salomon Smith Barney, now Citigroup. We find that the cross-sectional variation in risk ratings is largely explained by variables commonly viewed as risk proxies such as idiosyncratic risk, size, book-to-market and leverage. In addition, earnings-based measures of risk such as earnings quality and accounting losses also contribute to explaining the cross-sectional variation in the risk ratings. Finally, we document that the risk ratings can be used to predict future return volatility after controlling for other predictors of future volatility. We conclude that analysts play an important role as providers of information about investment risk.

Document Type

Article

Keywords

Risk, mispricing, volatility, financial analysts, information

Disciplines

Accounting

DOI

10.2139/ssrn.654504

Source

SMU Cox: Accounting (Topic)

Language

English

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