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Predicting Excess Stock Returns Out of Sample: Can Anything Beat the Historical Average?

John Y. Campbell, +1 more
- 01 Jul 2008 - 
- Vol. 21, Iss: 4, pp 1509-1531
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TLDR
Goyal and Welch as mentioned in this paper showed that many predictive regressions beat the historical average return, once weak restrictions are imposed on the signs of coefficients and return forecasts, and that the implied predictability of returns is substantial at longer horizons.
Abstract
Goyal and Welch (2007) argue that the historical average excess stock return forecasts future excess stock returns better than regressions of excess returns on predictor variables. In this article, we show that many predictive regressions beat the historical average return, once weak restrictions are imposed on the signs of coefficients and return forecasts. The out-of-sample explanatory power is small, but nonetheless is economically meaningful for mean-variance investors. Even better results can be obtained by imposing the restrictions of steady-state valuation models, thereby removing the need to estimate the average from a short sample of volatile stock returns. (JEL G10, G11) Towards the end of the last century, academic finance economists came to take seriously the view that aggregate stock returns are predictable. During the 1980s, a number of papers studied valuation ratios, such as the dividend-price ratio, earnings-price ratio, or smoothed earnings-price ratio. Value-oriented investors in the tradition of Graham and Dodd (1934) had always asserted that high valuation ratios are an indication of an undervalued stock market and should predict high subsequent returns, but these ideas did not carry much weight in the academic literature until authors such as Rozeff (1984), Fama and French (1988), and Campbell and Shiller (1988a, 1988b) found that valuation ratios are positively correlated with subsequent returns and that the implied predictability of returns is substantial at longer horizons. Around the same time, several papers pointed out that yields on short- and long-term treasury and corporate bonds are correlated with subsequent stock returns (Fama and Schwert,1977;KeimandStambaugh,1986;Campbell,1987;FamaandFrench, 1989).

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To Explain or to Predict

TL;DR: The purpose of this article is to clarify the distinction between explanatory and predictive modeling, to discuss its sources, and to reveal the practical implications of the distinction to each step in the modeling process.
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Out-of-Sample Equity Premium Prediction: Combination Forecasts and Links to the Real Economy

TL;DR: In this article, the authors argue that substantial model uncertainty and instability seriously impair the forecasting ability of individual predictive regression models, and they recommend combining individual model forecasts to improve out-of-sample equity premium prediction.
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Out-of-Sample Equity Premium Prediction: Combination Forecasts and Links to the Real Economy

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors argue that model uncertainty and instability seriously impair the forecasting ability of individual predictive regression models, and recommend combining individual forecasts, which delivers statistically and economically significant out-of-sample gains relative to the historical average consistently over time.
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Expectations of Returns and Expected Returns

TL;DR: This paper analyzed time-series of investor expectations of future stock market returns from six data sources between 1963 and 2011 and found that investor expectations are strongly negatively correlated with model-based expected returns.
References
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Book

The econometrics of financial markets

TL;DR: In this paper, Campbell, Lo, and MacKinlay present an attempt by three well-known and well-respected scholars to fill an acknowledged void in the empirical finance literature, a text covering the burgeoning field of empirical finance.
Journal ArticleDOI

Lifetime Portfolio Selection under Uncertainty: The Continuous-Time Case

TL;DR: In this paper, the combined problem of optimal portfolio selection and consumption rules for an individual in a continuous-time model was examined, where his income is generated by returns on assets and these returns or instantaneous "growth rates" are stochastic.
Journal ArticleDOI

Business conditions and expected returns on stocks and bonds

TL;DR: For example, this paper found that expected returns on common stocks and long-term bonds contain a term or maturity premium that has a clear business-cycle pattern (low near peaks, high near troughs).
Journal ArticleDOI

Dividend yields and expected stock returns

TL;DR: In this article, the power of dividend yields to forecast stock returns, measured by regression R2, increases with the return horizon, and the authors offer a two-part explanation: high autocorrelation causes the variance of expected returns to grow faster than the return-horizon.
Journal ArticleDOI

Modelling the Coherence in Short-run Nominal Exchange Rates: A Multivariate Generalized ARCH Model.

TL;DR: In this article, a multivariate time series model with time varying conditional variances and covariances but with constant conditional correlations is proposed, which is readily interpreted as an extension of the seemingly unrelated regression (SUR) model allowing for heteroskedasticity.
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