This paper examines the relationship between beta risk and realized stock index return in the presence of oil and exchange rate sensitivities for 15 countries in the Asia-Pacific region using the international factor model. Thirteen of the 15 countries have the expected beta signs and show significant sensitivity to domestic risk whentheworldstockmarketisinbothupanddownmodes.Intermsofoilsensitivity,only the Philippines and South Korea are oil-sensitive to changes in the oil price in the short run, when the price is expressed in local currency only. Basically no country shows sensitivity to oil price measured in US dollar regardless whether theoilmarketisupordown.Ninecountriesareaffectedbychangesintheexchangerate.Intermsofrelative factor sensitivity distribution, one is willing to conclude that these stock markets are more conditionally sensitive to local currency oil price changes than to beta risk wherever the relationships are significant. © 2006 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.