articleJournal of Accounting ResearchNov 14, 2003Closed access

Does Greater Firm‐Specific Return Variation Mean More or Less Informed Stock Pricing?

University of Miami · University of Alberta · +1 more institution

Indexed incrossref

Abstract

ABSTRACT Roll [1988] observes low R 2 statistics for common asset pricing models due to vigorous firm‐specific return variation not associated with public information. He concludes that this implies “either private information or else occasional frenzy unrelated to concrete information”[p. 56]. We show that firms and industries with lower market model R 2 statistics exhibit higher association between current returns and future earnings, indicating more information about future earnings in current stock returns. This supports Roll's first interpretation: higher firm‐specific return variation as a fraction of total variation signals more information‐laden stock prices and, therefore, more efficient stock…

Citation impact

964
total citations
FWCI
17.02
Percentile
100%
References
34
Citations per year

Authors

4

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Capital asset pricing model
  • Stock (firearms)
  • Earnings
  • Private information retrieval
  • Economics
  • Econometrics
  • Financial economics
  • Rate of return
No related works found for this paper.