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TwitterThe average market risk premium in the United States remained at *** percent in 2025. This suggests that the returns that investors expected for their investrments remained the same as the previous year in that country, in exchange for the risk they are exposed to. This premium has hovered between *** and *** percent since 2011. What causes country-specific risk? Risk to investments come from two main sources. First, inflation causes an asset’s price to decrease in real terms. A 100 U.S. dollar investment with three percent inflation is only worth ** U.S. dollars after one year. Investors are also interested in risks of project failure or non-performing loans. The unique U.S. context Analysts have historically considered the United States Treasury to be risk-free. This view has been shifting, but many advisors continue to use treasury yield rates as a risk-free rate. Given the fact that U.S. government securities are available at a variety of terms, this gives investment managers a range of tools for predicting future market developments.
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TwitterSplit into three categories (required, historical, and expected), market risk premiums measure the rate of return investors expect on an investment over the risk that investment holds. In Europe, average market risk premiums (MRP) sit between four and 12 percent. Greece sees hike in MRP Although it has a relatively high market risk premium, Greece has seen its rates significantly decrease since 2020. Greece also saw a *** percent return rate on risk-free investments. The same correlation can be seen with Europe’s less risky countries for investment. With Germany seeing *** percent market risk premiums and *** percent risk-free returns in Europe. Required, historical, and expected Separating the three types of market risk premiums is straightforward. Required MRPs differ between investors, as approaches to investment change and measure the rate of return needed for an investment to be made. Expected premiums look at the rate of return and what they are calculated to come out as, while historical MRPs look back over a period at the average rate of return that investors previously got in the past.
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TwitterThe average market risk premium used in Russia was the highest in 2025, reaching a value of ** percent in that year. The lowest market risk premiums used in that year were in France and Japan, at *** percent respectively.
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TwitterMarket risk premiums (MRP) measure the expected return on investment an investor looks to make. For potential investors looking to add to their portfolio, the perfect scenario for a risk-based investment would be a high rate of return with as small a risk as possible. There are three main concepts to MRPs, including required market risk premiums, historical market risk premiums, and expected market risk premiums. United Kingdom shows little return for risk Europe-wide, Finland had one of the lowest MRP alongside Poland and Germany. Ukraine had average risk premiums of *** percent in 2025. Having a lower market risk premium may seem bad, but for countries such as the UK and Germany where rates have been consistent for several years, it is because the market is stable as an environment for investment. Risk-free rates Risk-free rates are closely associated with market risk premiums and measure the rate of return on an investment with no risk. As there is no risk associated, the rate of return is lower than that of an MRP. Average risk-free rates across Europe are relatively low.
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Graph and download economic data for Real Risk Premium (TENEXPCHAREARISPRE) from Jan 1982 to Oct 2025 about premium, real, and USA.
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TwitterMarket risk premiums (MRP) measure the expected return on investment an investor looks to make. For potential investors looking to add to their portfolio, the perfect scenario for a risk-based investment would be a high rate of return with as small a risk as possible. There are * main concepts to MRPs, including required market risk premiums, historical market risk premiums and expected market risk premiums. In 2025, average market risk premiums in Poland decreased from the previous year to reach *** percent. Greece and Ukraine with the highest MRP in Europe In 2023, Poland was relatively well-placed for average market risk premiums in Europe, compared to other countries. Countries with the highest MRP, and therefore of the highest investment risk included Ukraine and Russia. Poland's risk premiums reached *** percent. Ukraine risk premiums averaged at ** percent in 2023. Risk-free rates Risk-free rates are closely associated to market risk premiums and measure the rate of return on an investment with no risk. As there is no risk associated, the rate of return is lower than that of an MRP. Average risk-free rates across Europe (except for Turkey and Ukraine) were relatively low in 2023. The risk-free rate of investment in Poland was *** percent as of 2023.
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TwitterMarket risk premiums (MRP) measure the expected return on investment an investor looks to make. For potential investors looking to add to their portfolio, the perfect scenario for a risk-based investment would be a high rate of return with as small a risk as possible. There are three main concepts to MRP’s, including required market risk premiums, historical market risk premiums and expected market risk premiums. In 2025, average market risk premiums in Germany stood at *** percent. MRP in Europe As of 2025, Germany had one of the ****** average market risk premiums in Europe. At the same time, market risk premiums in Russia were more than ***** as high due to the risk of investment involved. Risk free rates Risk free rates are closely associated to market risk premiums and measure the rate of return on an investment with no risk. As there is no risk associated, the rate of return is lower than that of an MRP. Average risk free rates across Europe were relatively low in 2025. The risk free rate of investment in Germany was less than three percent as of 2025.
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Yearly citation counts for the publication titled "Market Risk Premium and ESG Risk".
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This replication folder recreates all tables and figures in RFS article "The Market Risk Premium for Unsecured Consumer Credit Risk." For instructions, see the file "Instructions_ReplicationCode.pdf."
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This dataset provides quarterly estimates of Serbia’s equity risk premium (ERP) decomposed into four structural components: sovereign risk (CRP), liquidity risk (LP), behavioral or sentiment risk (BP), and institutional quality risk (IQP). The series cover the period 2015Q1–2025Q3 and are expressed in percentage points, capturing how each premium contributes to Serbia’s total cost of equity.
The data were constructed from multiple reliable sources, including CEIC Data, the Belgrade Stock Exchange (BELEX), Bloomberg, Damodaran’s country risk spreadsheets, and governance indicators from the World Bank (WGI) and Transparency International (CPI). Each component is estimated using a transparent, data-driven empirical framework:
The sovereign risk premium (CRP) follows Damodaran’s volatility-adjusted spread method.
The liquidity premium (LP) is derived from principal component analysis of bid–ask spreads, turnover ratios, and Amihud illiquidity metrics.
The behavioral premium (BP) is estimated from an EGARCH-in-Mean model capturing volatility feedback in BELEX15 returns.
The institutional quality premium (IQP) aggregates standardized governance and corruption indices through principal component analysis.
The dataset supports the study “Decomposing Serbia’s Equity Risk Premium: Liquidity and Institutional Constraints in a Frontier Market” and enables replication or extension of the analysis for other emerging and frontier markets. It provides insight into how structural factors—rather than macroeconomic volatility alone—shape equity pricing in small, underdeveloped capital markets.
The accompanying figure (“Decomposition of Serbia’s ERP, 2015–2025”) visualizes the quarterly evolution of the four components.
Variables:
Date (Quarter, 2015Q1–2025Q3)
CRP – Sovereign Risk Premium (%)
LP – Liquidity Premium (%)
BP – Behavioral Premium (%)
IQP – Institutional Quality Premium (%)
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Actual value and historical data chart for Brazil Risk Premium On Lending Prime Rate Minus Treasury Bill Rate Percent
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Armenia AM: Risk Premium on Lending: Lending Rate Minus Treasury Bill Rate data was reported at 1.253 % pa in 2023. This records an increase from the previous number of 1.131 % pa for 2022. Armenia AM: Risk Premium on Lending: Lending Rate Minus Treasury Bill Rate data is updated yearly, averaging 7.526 % pa from Dec 2001 (Median) to 2023, with 23 observations. The data reached an all-time high of 13.934 % pa in 2005 and a record low of 1.131 % pa in 2022. Armenia AM: Risk Premium on Lending: Lending Rate Minus Treasury Bill Rate data remains active status in CEIC and is reported by World Bank. The data is categorized under Global Database’s Armenia – Table AM.World Bank.WDI: Interest Rates. Risk premium on lending is the interest rate charged by banks on loans to private sector customers minus the 'risk free' treasury bill interest rate at which short-term government securities are issued or traded in the market. In some countries this spread may be negative, indicating that the market considers its best corporate clients to be lower risk than the government. The terms and conditions attached to lending rates differ by country, however, limiting their comparability.;International Monetary Fund, International Financial Statistics database.;;
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TwitterThe average market risk premium used in Switzerland fluctuated between 2011 and 2024. As of 2024, the average market risk premium in Switzerland stood at *** percent.
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Replication data for manuscript "The Historical and Expected Equity Risk Premium in Spain: A Long-Run View, 1900-2020". We present revised estimates of the historical (ex post) equity risk premium and an original estimate of the expected (ex ante) premium for the Madrid stock market over a period of 120 years. The results are based on a new equity index, the H-IBEX (1900-1987), built on high-quality monthly data hand-collected from primary sources and methodologically aligned with the modern Spanish index, IBEX35. We also reconstructed an original weighted index of government bonds (1900-1987) which can be smoothly connected with recent data. Data include original series for equities, bonds and bills for the Madrid Stock Exchange from 1900 to 1987, at monthly and annual frequency, spliced with more recent data on equities (IBEX35) and bonds, to cover the period until 2020. Documentation includes three Excel files (monthly series, annual series and summary of annual data) and one Eviews13 file with main regressions.
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Actual value and historical data chart for Georgia Risk Premium On Lending Prime Rate Minus Treasury Bill Rate Percent
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TwitterRisk premium on lending of Malawi surged by 6.92% from 19.85 % in 2023 to 21.22 % in 2024. Since the 9.90% drop in 2021, risk premium on lending soared by 49.90% in 2024. Risk premium on lending is the interest rate charged by banks on loans to private sector customers minus the "risk free" treasury bill interest rate at which short-term government securities are issued or traded in the market. In some countries this spread may be negative, indicating that the market considers its best corporate clients to be lower risk than the government. The terms and conditions attached to lending rates differ by country, however, limiting their comparability.
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United States US: Risk Premium on Lending: Lending Rate Minus Treasury Bill Rate data was reported at 3.186 % pa in 2016. This records a decrease from the previous number of 3.201 % pa for 2015. United States US: Risk Premium on Lending: Lending Rate Minus Treasury Bill Rate data is updated yearly, averaging 2.868 % pa from Dec 1960 (Median) to 2016, with 57 observations. The data reached an all-time high of 4.793 % pa in 1981 and a record low of 0.587 % pa in 1965. United States US: Risk Premium on Lending: Lending Rate Minus Treasury Bill Rate data remains active status in CEIC and is reported by World Bank. The data is categorized under Global Database’s United States – Table US.World Bank.WDI: Interest Rates. Risk premium on lending is the interest rate charged by banks on loans to private sector customers minus the 'risk free' treasury bill interest rate at which short-term government securities are issued or traded in the market. In some countries this spread may be negative, indicating that the market considers its best corporate clients to be lower risk than the government. The terms and conditions attached to lending rates differ by country, however, limiting their comparability.; ; International Monetary Fund, International Financial Statistics database.; ;
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TwitterThe average market risk premium in Canada was *** percent in 2024. This means investors demanded an extra *** Canadian dollars on a 100 Canadian dollar investment. This extra cost should compensate for the risk of an investment based in Canada. What causes risk? As far as country-specific factors are concerned, macroeconomic trends can cause risk. For example, the inflation rate in relation to other countries can change the relative value of an investment. Lower inflation in Canada could weaken the Canadian dollar, reducing the value of Canadian assets in terms of another currency, such as the euro or U.S. dollar. The Canadian context As a country, Canada has a fairly high national debt. Some economists point to this as an increased default risk, since debt servicing can become costly. However, most investors agree that Canada, as an advanced economy, is creditworthy and not at risk of defaulting. A better measure is to look at Canada’s risk premium in the context of interest rates from other countries. These deposit rates can be used as a baseline for the market risk premium of other countries, though they do not include all the factors that have been used to calculate this statistic.
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Actual value and historical data chart for Egypt Risk Premium On Lending Prime Rate Minus Treasury Bill Rate Percent
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Tanzania TZ: Risk Premium on Lending: Lending Rate Minus Treasury Bill Rate data was reported at -0.215 % pa in 2016. This records a decrease from the previous number of 3.234 % pa for 2015. Tanzania TZ: Risk Premium on Lending: Lending Rate Minus Treasury Bill Rate data is updated yearly, averaging 7.378 % pa from Dec 1995 (Median) to 2016, with 22 observations. The data reached an all-time high of 18.668 % pa in 1996 and a record low of -0.215 % pa in 2016. Tanzania TZ: Risk Premium on Lending: Lending Rate Minus Treasury Bill Rate data remains active status in CEIC and is reported by World Bank. The data is categorized under Global Database’s Tanzania – Table TZ.World Bank.WDI: Interest Rates. Risk premium on lending is the interest rate charged by banks on loans to private sector customers minus the 'risk free' treasury bill interest rate at which short-term government securities are issued or traded in the market. In some countries this spread may be negative, indicating that the market considers its best corporate clients to be lower risk than the government. The terms and conditions attached to lending rates differ by country, however, limiting their comparability.; ; International Monetary Fund, International Financial Statistics database.; ;
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TwitterThe average market risk premium in the United States remained at *** percent in 2025. This suggests that the returns that investors expected for their investrments remained the same as the previous year in that country, in exchange for the risk they are exposed to. This premium has hovered between *** and *** percent since 2011. What causes country-specific risk? Risk to investments come from two main sources. First, inflation causes an asset’s price to decrease in real terms. A 100 U.S. dollar investment with three percent inflation is only worth ** U.S. dollars after one year. Investors are also interested in risks of project failure or non-performing loans. The unique U.S. context Analysts have historically considered the United States Treasury to be risk-free. This view has been shifting, but many advisors continue to use treasury yield rates as a risk-free rate. Given the fact that U.S. government securities are available at a variety of terms, this gives investment managers a range of tools for predicting future market developments.