This paper provides evidence that portfolio disagreement measured bottom-up from individual-stock analyst forecast dispersions has a number of asset pricing implications. For the market portfolio, market disagreement mean-reverts and is negatively related to ex post expected market return. Contemporaneously, an increase in market disagreement manifests as a drop in discount rate. For book-to-market sorted portfolios, the value premium is stronger among high disagreement stocks. The underperformance by high disagreement stocks is stronger among growth stocks. Growth stocks are more sensitive to variations in disagreement relative to value stocks. These findings are consistent with asset pricing theory incorporating belief dispersion. (C) 201...
This paper provides a simple framework to study the effect of disagreement in a multi-asset market e...
We produce novel evidence for an equilibrium link between investors' disagreement, the market price ...
When people agree to disagree, how does the disagreement affect asset prices? Within an equilibrium ...
A large catalog of variables with no apparent connection to risk has been shown to forecast stock re...
A simple consumption-based two-period model is used to study the (theoretical) effects of disagreeme...
We explore analysts' earnings forecast data to improve on one popular disagreement measure-the ...
Divergence of opinions among investors, manifested in the dispersion of analysts\u27 earnings foreca...
A simple consumption-based two-period model is used to study the (theoretical) effects of disagreeme...
This article empirically examines "disagreement" models using JASDAQ market data by exploiting insti...
ABSTRACT. When people agree to disagree, how does the disagreement affect asset prices? Within an eq...
We analyse 289,443 online tweets from StockTwits and construct a divergence of opinion (disagreement...
We study the impact of model disagreement on the dynamics of asset prices and return volatility. In ...
In this paper we generalize Pitts and Tauchen’s (1983) well-known Mixture of Distribution Hypothesis...
2Disagreement in a Multi-Asset Market This paper provides a simple framework to study the effect of ...
Disagreement is used as a measure of both investor heterogeneity and uncertainty. We study whether d...
This paper provides a simple framework to study the effect of disagreement in a multi-asset market e...
We produce novel evidence for an equilibrium link between investors' disagreement, the market price ...
When people agree to disagree, how does the disagreement affect asset prices? Within an equilibrium ...
A large catalog of variables with no apparent connection to risk has been shown to forecast stock re...
A simple consumption-based two-period model is used to study the (theoretical) effects of disagreeme...
We explore analysts' earnings forecast data to improve on one popular disagreement measure-the ...
Divergence of opinions among investors, manifested in the dispersion of analysts\u27 earnings foreca...
A simple consumption-based two-period model is used to study the (theoretical) effects of disagreeme...
This article empirically examines "disagreement" models using JASDAQ market data by exploiting insti...
ABSTRACT. When people agree to disagree, how does the disagreement affect asset prices? Within an eq...
We analyse 289,443 online tweets from StockTwits and construct a divergence of opinion (disagreement...
We study the impact of model disagreement on the dynamics of asset prices and return volatility. In ...
In this paper we generalize Pitts and Tauchen’s (1983) well-known Mixture of Distribution Hypothesis...
2Disagreement in a Multi-Asset Market This paper provides a simple framework to study the effect of ...
Disagreement is used as a measure of both investor heterogeneity and uncertainty. We study whether d...
This paper provides a simple framework to study the effect of disagreement in a multi-asset market e...
We produce novel evidence for an equilibrium link between investors' disagreement, the market price ...
When people agree to disagree, how does the disagreement affect asset prices? Within an equilibrium ...