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Forecast Dispersion and the Cross Section of Expected Returns
593
Citations
12
References
2004
Year
Empirical FinanceForecasting MethodologyEconomic ForecastingAsset PricingCorporate Risk ManagementManagementEconomic AnalysisLevered FirmForecast DispersionFinancial EconometricsEarnings ForecastsEconomicsAccountingQuantitative FinanceForecastingFinanceMacro FinanceFinancial EconomicsNegative RelationshipEconometricsBusinessStock Market PredictionFinancial ForecastFinancial Risk
ABSTRACT Recent work by Diether, Malloy, and Scherbina (2002) has established a negative relationship between stock returns and the dispersion of analysts' earnings forecasts. I offer a simple explanation for this phenomenon based on the interpretation of dispersion as a proxy for unpriced information risk arising when asset values are unobservable. The relationship then follows from a general options‐pricing result: For a levered firm, expected returns should always decrease with the level of idiosyncratic asset risk. This story is formalized with a straightforward model. Reasonable parameter values produce large effects, and the theory's main empirical prediction is supported in cross‐sectional tests.
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