Since the bubble of the late 1990s the dividend yield appears non-stationary indicating the breakdown of the equilibrium relationship between prices and dividends. Two lines of research have developed in order to explain this apparent breakdown. First, that the dividend yield is better characterised as a non-linear process and second, that it is subject to mean level shifts. This paper jointly models both of these characteristics by allowing non-linear reversion to a changing mean level. Results support stationarity of this model for eight international dividend yield series. This model is than applied to the forecast of monthly stock returns. Evidence supports our time-varying non-linear model over linear alternatives, particularly so on t...
The aim of this paper is to provide a critical and comprehensive reexamination of empirical evidence...
The conventional wisdom is that the aggregate stock price is predictable by the lagged pricedividend...
The aims of this paper are (a) to examine whether changes in dividend can be forecasted from past fi...
Using data for forty markets, this paper examines the nature and possible causes of time-variation w...
This paper examines the forecasting ability of the dividend–price ratio for international stoc...
This paper argues that dividend yield stock return predictability is time-varying. We conjecture tha...
We propose a general equilibrium model with multiple securities in which investors' risk preferences...
This paper extends US evidence on the ability of current dividend yields to predict future equity re...
We investigate dividend yield predictability for stock returns and dividend growth for eight countri...
Recent stock price movements have led to a re-examination of the present value model. An increasing ...
We use a dividend-yield model from Campbell and Shiller (1988) to forecast the future stock market r...
Can dividend yields out-predict stock returns without short rates? Using monthly data of the UK over...
This paper examines the extent to which swings in stock prices can be related to variations in the d...
The dividend-price ratio changes over time due to variation in expected returns and in forecasts of ...
Evidence of dividend yield return predictability has been presented so widely and consistently that ...
The aim of this paper is to provide a critical and comprehensive reexamination of empirical evidence...
The conventional wisdom is that the aggregate stock price is predictable by the lagged pricedividend...
The aims of this paper are (a) to examine whether changes in dividend can be forecasted from past fi...
Using data for forty markets, this paper examines the nature and possible causes of time-variation w...
This paper examines the forecasting ability of the dividend–price ratio for international stoc...
This paper argues that dividend yield stock return predictability is time-varying. We conjecture tha...
We propose a general equilibrium model with multiple securities in which investors' risk preferences...
This paper extends US evidence on the ability of current dividend yields to predict future equity re...
We investigate dividend yield predictability for stock returns and dividend growth for eight countri...
Recent stock price movements have led to a re-examination of the present value model. An increasing ...
We use a dividend-yield model from Campbell and Shiller (1988) to forecast the future stock market r...
Can dividend yields out-predict stock returns without short rates? Using monthly data of the UK over...
This paper examines the extent to which swings in stock prices can be related to variations in the d...
The dividend-price ratio changes over time due to variation in expected returns and in forecasts of ...
Evidence of dividend yield return predictability has been presented so widely and consistently that ...
The aim of this paper is to provide a critical and comprehensive reexamination of empirical evidence...
The conventional wisdom is that the aggregate stock price is predictable by the lagged pricedividend...
The aims of this paper are (a) to examine whether changes in dividend can be forecasted from past fi...