articleReview of Financial StudiesSep 22, 2007BRONZE OA

The Dog That Did Not Bark: A Defense of Return Predictability

University of Chicago

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Abstract

To question the statistical significance of return predictability, we cannot specify a null that simply turns off that predictability, leaving dividend growth predictability at its essentially zero sample value. If neither returns nor dividend growth are predictable, then the dividend-price ratio is a constant. If the null turns off return predictability, it must turn on the predictability of dividend growth, and then confront the evidence against such predictability in the data. I find that the absence of dividend growth predictability gives much stronger statistical evidence against the null, with roughly 1-2% probability values, than does the presence of return predictability, which only gives about 20%…

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Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Predictability
  • Bark (sound)
  • Geography
  • Forestry
  • Mathematics
  • Statistics
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • No poverty
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