Publication | Closed Access
Long‐Term Return Reversals: Overreaction or Taxes?
83
Citations
32
References
2007
Year
Empirical FinanceOptimal TaxationCorporate TaxLawLong‐term Return ReversalsTime Series EconometricsTax IncentiveCorporate TaxationAsset PricingBehavioral FinanceTax PolicyU.s. Stock ReturnsTax LawEconomicsQuantitative FinanceTax AvoidanceFinanceU.s. ReturnsPublic FinanceFederal TaxFinancial EconomicsAbstract Long‐term ReversalsBusinessStock Market PredictionFinancial ForecastMarket TrendCapital Structure
ABSTRACT Long‐term reversals in U.S. stock returns are better explained as the rational reactions of investors to locked‐in capital gains than an irrational overreaction to news. Predictors of returns based on the overreaction hypothesis have no power, while those that measure locked‐in capital gains do, completely subsuming past returns measures that are traditionally used to predict long‐term returns. In data from Hong Kong, where investment income is not taxed, reversals are nonexistent, and returns are not forecastable either by traditional measures or by measures based on the capital gains lock‐in hypothesis that successfully predict U.S. returns.
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