03-107

DOES RISK OR MISPRICING EXPLAIN THE CROSS-SECTION OF STOCK PRICES?

Randolph B. Cohen, Christopher Polk, and Tuomo Vuolteenaho

Most previous research evaluates market efficiency and asset pricing models using average abnormal trading profits on dynamic trading strategies. We measure the ability of the capital asset pricing model (CAPM) and the efficient-market hypothesis to explain the level of stock prices. First, we find that cash-flow beats (measured by regressing firms' earnings on the market's earnings) explain the prices of value and growth stocks well, with a plausible premium. Second, we use a present-value model to decompose the cross-sectional variance of firms' price-to-book ratios into two components due to risk-adjusted fundamental value and mispricing. When we allow the discount rates to vary as predicted by the CAPM, the variance share of mispricing is negligible.
Keywords: stock prices, present value, book-to-market, variance decomposition, capital asset pricing model beta, expected returns, return on equity.
JEL classification codes: G120, G140

FIN
61 pages


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