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Examining the Sources of Excess Return Predictability: Stochastic Volatility or Market Inefficiency?
by
Lansing, Kevin J
, LeRoy, Stephen F
, Ma, Jun
in
Investments
/ Securities markets
/ Volatility
2022
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Examining the Sources of Excess Return Predictability: Stochastic Volatility or Market Inefficiency?
by
Lansing, Kevin J
, LeRoy, Stephen F
, Ma, Jun
in
Investments
/ Securities markets
/ Volatility
2022
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Examining the Sources of Excess Return Predictability: Stochastic Volatility or Market Inefficiency?
Paper
Examining the Sources of Excess Return Predictability: Stochastic Volatility or Market Inefficiency?
2022
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Overview
We use a consumption based asset pricing model to show that the predictability of excess returns on risky assets can arise from only two sources: (1) stochastic volatility of model variables, or (2) departures from rational expectations that give rise to predictable investor forecast errors and market inefficiency. From an empirical perspective, we investigate whether 1-month ahead excess returns on stocks can be predicted using measures of consumer sentiment and excess return momentum, while controlling directly and indirectly for the presence of stochastic volatility. A variable that interacts the 12-month sentiment change with recent return momentum is a robust predictor of excess stock returns both in-sample and out-of-sample. The predictive power of this variable derives mainly from periods when sentiment has been declining and return momentum is negative, forecasting a further decline in the excess stock return. We show that the sentiment-momentum variable is positively correlated with fluctuations in Google searches for the term “stock market,” suggesting that the sentiment-momentum variable helps to predict excess returns because it captures shifts in investor attention, particularly during stock market declines.
Publisher
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
Subject
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