Unpredictable dividend growth by the dividend-price ratio is considered a 'stylized fact' in post war US data. Using long-term data, covering more than 80 years from the US and three European countries, we revisit this stylized fact, and we also report results on return predictability. We find large cross-country differences regarding return and dividend growth predictability. For the US, we confirm Chen's (2008) finding of a 'tale of two periods' but with the important difference that short- and long-horizon real returns are significantly predictable in both sub-periods (1871- 1949 and 1950-2008), while long-horizon real dividend growth is unpredictable in the early period and significantly predictable in the 'wrong' direction in the post ...
We use a dividend-yield model from Campbell and Shiller (1988) to forecast the future stock market r...
Our paper suggests a simple, recursive residuals (out-of-sample) graphical approach toevaluating the...
The conventional wisdom is that the aggregate stock price is predictable by the lagged pricedividend...
A widely replicated result, using U.S. data, is that dividend-price ratios predict future returns, n...
We investigate a consumption-based present value relation that is a function of future dividend grow...
We show that dividend-growth predictability by the dividend yield is the rule rather than the except...
We consistently show that in large equity markets, the dividend-price ratio is significantly related...
Asymptotic tests over-reject the null of no predictability in present-value models. We develop a non...
Asymptotic tests over-reject the null of no predictability in present-value models. We develop a non...
© Michael G. Foster School of Business, University of Washington 2015. We show that dividend-growth ...
We investigate dividend yield predictability for stock returns and dividend growth for eight countri...
We analyze aggregate market prices and dividends throughout modern financial history. Focusing on th...
The dividend-price ratio changes over time due to variation in expected returns and in forecasts of ...
2018-05-08With CRSP return index widely used to compute the dividend‐price ratio in the finance lite...
We model consumption and dividend growth as different processes across two latent regimes. We estima...
We use a dividend-yield model from Campbell and Shiller (1988) to forecast the future stock market r...
Our paper suggests a simple, recursive residuals (out-of-sample) graphical approach toevaluating the...
The conventional wisdom is that the aggregate stock price is predictable by the lagged pricedividend...
A widely replicated result, using U.S. data, is that dividend-price ratios predict future returns, n...
We investigate a consumption-based present value relation that is a function of future dividend grow...
We show that dividend-growth predictability by the dividend yield is the rule rather than the except...
We consistently show that in large equity markets, the dividend-price ratio is significantly related...
Asymptotic tests over-reject the null of no predictability in present-value models. We develop a non...
Asymptotic tests over-reject the null of no predictability in present-value models. We develop a non...
© Michael G. Foster School of Business, University of Washington 2015. We show that dividend-growth ...
We investigate dividend yield predictability for stock returns and dividend growth for eight countri...
We analyze aggregate market prices and dividends throughout modern financial history. Focusing on th...
The dividend-price ratio changes over time due to variation in expected returns and in forecasts of ...
2018-05-08With CRSP return index widely used to compute the dividend‐price ratio in the finance lite...
We model consumption and dividend growth as different processes across two latent regimes. We estima...
We use a dividend-yield model from Campbell and Shiller (1988) to forecast the future stock market r...
Our paper suggests a simple, recursive residuals (out-of-sample) graphical approach toevaluating the...
The conventional wisdom is that the aggregate stock price is predictable by the lagged pricedividend...