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Digesting Anomalies: An Investment Approach

TLDR
In this paper, the authors proposed a new factor model that consists of the market factor, a size factor, an investment factor, and a return-on-equity factor.
Abstract
Motivated from investment-based asset pricing, we propose a new factor model that consists of the market factor, a size factor, an investment factor, and a return-on-equity factor The new model [i] outperforms the Carhart (1997) four-factor model in pricing portfolios formed on earnings surprise, idiosyncratic volatility, financial distress, equity issues, as well as on investment and return-on-equity; [ii] performs similarly as the Carhart model in pricing portfolios on momentum as well as on size and book-to-market; but [iii] underperforms in pricing the total accrual deciles Our model's performance, combined with its clear economic intuition, suggests that it can serve as a new workhorse model for academic research and investment management practice

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Citations
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Quality Assurance: Demystifying the Quality Factor in Equities and Bonds

TL;DR: In this article, the cross-asset-class properties of quality as a factor, particularly its joint behavior across equities and fixed income, are investigated. And the authors show that a 60/40 allocation to the quality crossasset class mix offers a statistically significant return, with lower tail risk reflecting the greater possible diversification benefits from factor allocations compared to traditional cap-weighted allocations.
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Noise Demand, Limits of Arbitrage, and Stock Price Bubbles: Evidence from Mergers and Acquisitions

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors hypothesize that there is an increased noise demand for stocks of acquirers in response to acquisition announcements and that the demand is greater for acquirers with higher uncertainty in their equity valuation.
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Leasing as a Risk-Sharing Mechanism

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors argue that leasing is a risk-sharing mechanism: risk-tolerant lessors provide insurance to risk-averse lessees against systematic capital price fluctuations.
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The q-theory explanation for the external financing effect: New evidence

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors provide new evidence in support of the q-theory explanation for the external financing effect, which is referred to as the external finance effect, using total asset growth as a comprehensive measure of overall corporate investment and total profitability gross of R&D expenditures as a measure of true economic profitability.
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Short selling and market anomalies

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors assess the importance of well-known market anomalies for shorting strategies and how it changes over the 1988-2014 period, finding that anomalies contribute to both relative short interest (RSI) and RSI's negative information content about future earnings surprises and analyst actions.
References
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Common risk factors in the returns on stocks and bonds

TL;DR: In this article, the authors identify five common risk factors in the returns on stocks and bonds, including three stock-market factors: an overall market factor and factors related to firm size and book-to-market equity.
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Risk, Return, and Equilibrium: Empirical Tests

TL;DR: In this article, the relationship between average return and risk for New York Stock Exchange common stocks was tested using a two-parameter portfolio model and models of market equilibrium derived from the two parameter portfolio model.
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Returns to Buying Winners and Selling Losers: Implications for Stock Market Efficiency

TL;DR: In this article, the authors show that strategies that buy stocks that have performed well in the past and sell stocks that had performed poorly in past years generate significant positive returns over 3- to 12-month holding periods.
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Does the Stock Market Overreact

TL;DR: In this article, a study of market efficiency investigates whether people tend to "overreact" to unexpected and dramatic news events and whether such behavior affects stock prices, based on CRSP monthly return data, is consistent with the overreaction hypothesis.
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Multifactor Explanations of Asset Pricing Anomalies

TL;DR: In this article, the authors show that many of the CAPM average-return anomalies are related, and they are captured by the three-factor model in Fama and French (FF 1993).
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