Stock Market Predictability: Is it There?A Critical Review
This paper aims to survey selected recent papers presenting new evidenceon an age-old question in financial economics: “Are stock market returnspredictable?”. The hypothesis that equity returns are predictable (specificallyat long horizons) has been called a “new fact in finance” by Cochrane(1999). Thus, stock market predictability is now taken almost as a featureof the data. However, there is less consensus on what drives thispredictability. It may reflect time-varying risk premiums, it may reflectirrational behavior on the part of market participants, or it may simplynot present in the data — a statistical fluke due to poor statistical inference.It is this last possibility that seems to gain increasing credibilityconsidering the long list of authors criticizing the statistical methodologiesin the predictability literature. The results of these studies typically showthat findings against the constant expected excess return hypothesis basedon standard statistical inference can appear much more significant thanthey really are. Of course, the strength and usefulness
Corporate finance and investment policy. Other aspects ; Management of financial services: stock exchange and bank management science (including saving banks) ; Individual Working Papers, Preprints ; Global Resources