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Journal ArticleDOI

Market Expectations in the Cross‐Section of Present Values

Bryan T. Kelly, +1 more
- 01 Oct 2013 - 
- Vol. 68, Iss: 5, pp 1721-1756
TLDR
Kelly et al. as mentioned in this paper showed that relying on aggregate quantities drastically understates the degree of value ratios' predictive content for both returns and cash flow growth, and hence understate the volatility of investor expectations.
Abstract
Returns and cash flow growth for the aggregate U.S. stock market are highly and robustly predictable. Using a single factor extracted from the cross-section of book-tomarket ratios, we find an out-of-sample return forecasting R 2 of 13% at the annual frequency (0.9% monthly). We document similar out-of-sample predictability for returns on value, size, momentum, and industry portfolios. We present a model linking aggregate market expectations to disaggregated valuation ratios in a latent factor system. Spreads in value portfolios’ exposures to economic shocks are key to identifying predictability and are consistent with duration-based theories of the value premium. THE MOST COMMON APPROACH to measuring aggregate return and cash flow expectations is predictive regression. As suggested by the present value relationship between prices, discount rates, and future cash flows, research shows that the aggregate price-dividend ratio is among the most informative predictive variables. Typical in-sample estimates find that about 10% of annual return variation can be accounted for by forecasts based on the aggregate book-tomarket ratio, but find little or no out-of-sample predictive power. 1 In this paper we show that reliance on aggregate quantities drastically understates the degree of value ratios’ predictive content for both returns and cash flow growth, and hence understates the volatility of investor expectations. Our estimates suggest that as much as 13% of the out-of-sample variation in annual market returns (as much as 12% for dividend growth), and somewhat more of the insample variation, can be explained by the cross-section of past disaggregated value ratios. To harness disaggregated information we represent the cross-section of assetspecific book-to-market ratios as a dynamic latent factor model. We relate disaggregated value ratios to aggregate expected market returns and cash flow growth. Our model is based on the idea that the same dynamic state variables driving aggregate expectations also govern the dynamics of the entire panel ∗ Kelly is with Booth School of Business, University of Chicago, and Pruitt is with the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. The view expressed here are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Federal Reserve System or its staff. 1 See Cochrane (2005) and Koijen and Van Nieuwerburgh (2011) for surveys of return and cash flow predictability evidence using the aggregate price-dividend ratio. Similar results obtain from forecasts based on the aggregate book-to-market ratio.

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Citations
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Investor sentiment aligned: : A powerful predictor of stock returns

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Book ChapterDOI

Forecasting Stock Returns

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors survey the literature on stock return forecasting, highlighting the challenges faced by forecasters as well as strategies for improving return forecasts and illustrate key issues via an empirical application based on updated data.
ReportDOI

Empirical Asset Pricing via Machine Learning

TL;DR: Improved risk premium measurement through machine learning simplifies the investigation into economic mechanisms of asset pricing and highlights the value of machine learning in financial innovation.
Journal ArticleDOI

What is the Expected Return on the Market

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors derived a lower bound on the equity premium in terms of a volatility index, SVIX, that can be calculated from index option prices and argued that the high equity premia available at times of stress largely reflect high expected returns over the very short run.
Journal ArticleDOI

Systemic risk and the macroeconomy: An empirical evaluation

TL;DR: The authors studied how changes in 19 different measures of systemic risk skew the distribution of subsequent shocks to industrial production and other macroeconomic variables in the US and Europe over several decades and proposed dimension reduction estimators for constructing systemic risk indexes from the cross section of measures and demonstrate their success in predicting future macroeconomic shocks out of sample.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Current State of the Arbitrage Pricing Theory

Jay Shanken
- 01 Sep 1992 - 
TL;DR: This paper showed that any variable correlated with the factor can serve as the benchmark in an approximate APT expected return relation, and provided a simple proof of a recent theorem presented by Reisman (1992), concerning the use of proxies for the factors in the return generating process of the arbitrage pricing theory.
Journal ArticleDOI

Disappearing dividends: changing firm characteristics or lower propensity to pay?

TL;DR: The proportion of "rms paying cash dividends falls from 66.5% in 1978 to 20.8% in 1999, due in part to the changing characteristics of publicly traded " rms as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Filtering Out Expected Dividends and Expected Returns

TL;DR: In this article, the authors apply a state space approach to the analysis of stock return predictability and use the Kalman filter to extract them from the observed history of realized dividends and returns.

Is the Value Premium a Puzzle

TL;DR: Hsieh et al. as discussed by the authors provided an economic explanation of the value premium puzzle, differences in price/dividend and Sharpe ratios of value and growth assets, volatilities of ex-post returns on the two stocks and their correlation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Is the Value Spread a Useful Predictor of Returns

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors cast doubt on Campbell and Vuolteenaho's conclusion that the market-to-book spread is a predictor of aggregate stock returns, and instead show that the value spread is more useful in predicting returns.
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