Disagreement and the Stock Market
Princeton University · National Bureau of Economic Research
Abstract
A large catalog of variables with no apparent connection to risk has been shown to forecast stock returns, both in the time series and the cross-section. For instance, we see medium-term momentum and post-earnings drift in returns—the tendency for stocks that have had unusually high past returns or good earnings news to continue to deliver relatively strong returns over the subsequent six to twelve months (and vice-versa for stocks with low past returns or bad earnings news); we also see longer-run fundamental reversion—the tendency for “glamour” stocks with high ratios of market value to earnings, cashflows, or book value to deliver weak returns over the subsequent several years (and vice-versa for “value”…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 37.07
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 65
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Economics
- Earnings
- Stock (firearms)
- Predictability
- Financial economics
- Stock market
- Econometrics
- Cash flow