Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5084762 International Review of Financial Analysis 2014 12 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Predictive regressions for stock returns, dividend and consumption growth•Uncover evidence of market- and time-variation•Link variation to economic and market factors•Discriminate between discount rate and cash flow factors for stock movement•Stronger risk premium effect in stocks and cash flow effect in consumption growth

This paper links variation in the predictive regressions for stock returns, dividend growth and consumption growth to economic and market factors. The nature of these links can reveal whether movement in asset prices occurs primarily through the discount rate or cash flow channel, while they also help explain the reported mixed results for predictability. Variation is examined through cross-sectional regressions across 15 markets and over time using rolling regressions. The cross-sectional and time-varying parameters are regressed against output growth, interest rates and inflation as well as market variables using fixed effects panel as well as both OLS and logit approaches. The key implication for asset pricing is that although movement occurs through both channels, stock return predictability is more dominated by the discount rate channel and consumption growth predictability more so by the cash flow channel. Intuitively, such a difference may arise as investors and households rebalance their asset holdings and consumption at different speeds. There is also some evidence of money illusion through the inflation variable.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Economics, Econometrics and Finance Economics and Econometrics
Authors
,