Journal article

Estimating background risk hedging demands from cross-sectional data

J Brugler, J Inkmann, A Rizzo

Journal of Financial Research | WILEY | Published : 2025

Open access

Abstract

Based on a theory of portfolio choice with non-tradable assets, we estimate hedging demands due to background risks before and after the Great Recession for U.S households. Hedging demands related to human capital, residential property and business assets reduce financial risk-taking, but these effects decline over the Great Recession, as does expected risk-adjusted stock market performance. We also estimate the appropriate discount rate to compute the risk-adjusted value of human capital, which declines by around eight percent over the period. Unlike previous literature requiring panel data with large time dimensions, our approach only requires cross-sectional data to identify hedging deman..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Funding Acknowledgements

The views of this paper are those of the authors and not of the Australian Bureau of Statistics. Rizzo gratefully acknowledges the University of Melbourne Kinsman Fund for financial support. We thank Nikolai Roussanov for helpful comments. An earlier version of this paper was circulated with the title "Did background risk hedging demands change over the Great Recession?". Open access publishing facilitated by The University of Melbourne, as part of the Wiley - The University of Melbourne agreement via the Council of Australian University Librarians.