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Hedging inflation with individual US stocks: A long-run portfolio analysis
Institution:1. School of Business, Lebanese American University, Lebanon;2. Department of Accounting & Finance, Applied Science University, Bahrain;3. School of Business, Economics and Information Systems, University of Passau, Innstrasse 27, 94030 Passau, Germany;4. Department of Accounting & Finance, KFUPM Business School, King Fahd University of Petroleum and Minerals, KSA
Abstract:This paper examines whether individual stocks can act as inflation hedgers. We focus on longer investment horizons and construct in- and out-of-sample portfolios based on the long-run relationship (cointegration) of stock prices with respect to consumer prices. Empirical evidence suggests that investors are better off by holding a portfolio of stocks with higher long-run betas as part of asset selection and allocation strategy. Stocks that outperform inflation tend to be drawn from the Energy and Industrial sectors. Finally, we observe that the companies average inflation hedging ability declined steadily over the past ten years, while the number of firms that hedge inflation has decreased considerably after the recent downturn of the US economy.
Keywords:Stock prices  Good prices  Hedging  Generalized Fisher effect  Quantile regression
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