Indian Institute of Management, Ahmedabad

Fama French and Momentum Factors: Data Library for Indian Market

New Series

This page has the new releases of the data library. For legacy releases (ending in 2019) of data files provided by the Centre for Monitoring Indian Economy (CMIE) implementing our methodology, see the Legacy Page.

Changes in data sources

Compared to the legacy releases, we have made the following changes in our data sources:

  1. We are now running all the computations ourselves while for the legacy releases, the computations were carried out by CMIE using the methodology provided by us.
  2. We are now using CMIE’s Prowess DX which provides three data releases every year (March, September and December). Accordingly, we also plan to have three releases every year.
  3. We now cover both BSE and NSE listed companies while the legacy releases used data only from BSE and therefore excluded the companies which are exclusively listed on NSE. Also for stocks listed on both exchanges, we pick up prices from the exchange with greater aggregate liquidity.
  4. While legacy releases computed total returns by adjusting the price returns for the dividends paid by the company, we now rely on the total returns field available directly in Prowess DX.

We also took advantage of the break in the series to make some improvements and refinements in the methodology.

  1. Based on feedback from market participants and researchers, we have eliminated micro-cap stocks and penny stocks that are not part of the investable universe for most investors. Specifically, we apply two filters:
    • The market cap filter excludes all stocks with a market cap during the preceding year below 10% of the median market cap.
    • The price filter excludes stocks whose median price during the preceding year is less than INR 1.00.
    For example, using the data for 2019-20 (October to September) to set the filters that will be used for computing the factor portfolios and returns for the year 2020-21 (October to September):
    • The micro cap cutoff came to INR 109.5 million and excluded the bottom 25.8% of the universe of stocks.
    • The penny stock filter eliminated 5.3% of stocks from the universe.
    • As the stocks that fall under the two criteria overlap significantly, the two filters together excluded 26.8% of the stocks.
  2. Some double-sort portfolios (especially the Large-Cap Value portfolio) have very few stocks in some months. Since factor portfolios need at least a minimal degree of diversification, we do not allow any double-sort portfolio to have less than five stocks in any month. If the Large-Cap Value portfolio is absent after applying this rule, the value factor is computed as the difference between Small Growth and Small Value.
  3. We found that our survivorship bias algorithm has not identified any “vanishing companies” after the mid 1990s. This is not surprising in the light of the regulatory reforms that took place after the mid 1990s “vanishing companies” episode. We have therefore discontinued the ongoing running of this algorithm, but we do provide survivorship bias free files that correct for the mid-1990s “vanishing companies”.

The data in the new series does not therefore exactly match the data in the Legacy Releases and in our Working Paper, but the correlations between the two series are very high and the discrepancies are attributable to the more comprehensive data sources and the improvements in the methodology as explained above.

Scope and Methodology

This data library provides regularly updated Fama-French and momentum factor returns for the Indian equity market using data from CMIE Prowess. We differ from the previous studies in several significant ways.

  1. We cover a greater number of firms relative to the existing studies.
  2. We exclude illiquid firms to ensure that the portfolios are investable.
  3. We have classified firms into small and big using more appropriate cut-off considering the distribution of firm size.
  4. As there were several instances of vanishing of public companies in India in the mid 1990s, we have computed the returns with a correction for survival bias.

The methodology is described in more detail in our Working Paper: Sobhesh K. Agarwalla, Joshy Jacob & Jayanth R. Varma (2013) “Four factor model in Indian equities market”, W.P. No. 2013-09-05, Indian Institute of Management, Ahmedabad.

All return values are expressed as holding period return (HPR). The monthly and yearly return values of the factors are compounded values of daily returns. The returns and the break-points are recalculated from the beginning of the period each time we update the results. The values may undergo a change if CMIE revises its database retrospectively. We recommend using the Survivorship-Bias adjusted values if the analysis includes the period between 1995-2000.

Some further clarifications are provided in the Frequently Asked Questions

Time Period Covered in this Release

release Start.Month End.Month
2024-03 October 1993 March 2024

Factor Returns

Last month Last 3 months Year to date Since 01-Jan-1994
Market premium % -10.04812 21.92568 21.92568 5.204085
SMB % -65.33524 -38.51035 -38.51035 -3.985234
HML % 13.65738 58.99886 58.99886 7.111281
WML % 36.88687 60.35654 60.35654 11.912753

All returns are annualized geometric mean returns.

Factor plots

Factor Return Plots

Drawdown Tables and Plots

Indian Markets Return Data: Downloadable Data Files

Without Survivorship-Bias Adjustment (Deprecated)

How to cite the data

Please cite the source of the data as follows:

Agarwalla, S. K., Jacob, J. and Varma, J. R. (2013), Four factor model in Indian equities market, Working Paper W.P. No. 2013-09-05, Indian Institute of Management, Ahmedabad. URL: https://faculty.iima.ac.in/~iffm/Indian-Fama-French-Momentum/four-factors-India-90s-onwards-IIM-WP-Version.pdf

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Archive

Earlier releases are available at the archive mainly to allow researchers to replicate studies carried out using an older release.

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