PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Greg M. Richey TI - Is it Good to Sin When Times are Bad? <em>An Investigation of the Defensive Nature of Sin Stocks</em> AID - 10.3905/joi.2020.1.144 DP - 2020 Aug 05 TA - The Journal of Investing PG - joi.2020.1.144 4099 - https://pm-research.com/content/early/2020/08/05/joi.2020.1.144.short 4100 - https://pm-research.com/content/early/2020/08/05/joi.2020.1.144.full AB - In this article, I use an EGARCH model to investigate whether a portfolio of sin stocks is less resistant to downside risk or losses during market downturns than is the S&amp;P 500, a benchmark to approximate the market portfolio of risky stocks. In addition, I use the aforementioned model to analyze the defensive nature of individual sin industries (alcohol, tobacco, gambling, and defense) against the market portfolio. This article contributes to the existing literature on sin investing in two ways. First, my results illustrate the defensive nature of sin stocks and help reinforce the notion that sin stocks have some immunity from downside risk due to cyclical fluctuations and economic downturns. Second, I show results not only from a portfolio of sin stocks, but from various sin industries as well. The industry results highlight the defensive nature of sin stocks, an important component of their risk-adjusted returns.TOPICS: Portfolio theory, portfolio construction, ESG investingKey Findings• Bad-news events have a lesser impact on sin stock return volatility than do good-news events.• Increases in the volatility index (VIX) lead to increases in the overall volatility of sin stocks.• Sin stocks have had higher returns and Sharpe ratios than the market portfolio and sin industry funds’ returns have been less correlated with each other than they have been with the market portfolio.