|
||||
|
||||
The Inventory Growth SpreadFrederico BeloUniversity of Minnesota; National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) Xiaoji LinOhio State University (OSU) - Fisher College of Business November 26, 2012 Fisher College of Business Working Paper No. 201203-023 Charles A. Dice Center Working Paper No. 2012-023 Abstract: Previous studies show that firms with low inventory growth outperform firms with high inventory growth in the cross-section of publicly traded firms. In addition, inventory investment is volatile and procyclical, and inventory-to-sales is persistent and countercyclical. We embed an inventory holding motive into the investment-based asset pricing framework by modeling inventory as a factor of production with convex and nonconvex adjustment costs. The augmented model simultaneously matches the large inventory growth spread in the data, as well as the time-series properties of the firm level capital investment, inventory investment, and inventory-to-sales. Our conditional single-factor model also implies that traditional unconditional factor models such as the CAPM should fail to explain the inventory growth spread, although not with the same large pricing errors observed in the data.
Number of Pages in PDF File: 53 Keywords: Cross-Sectional Asset Pricing, Stock Return Predictability, Q-theory, Accruals Anomaly JEL Classification: E22, E23, E44, G12 working papers seriesDate posted: December 22, 2009 ; Last revised: November 26, 2012Suggested Citation |
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||
© 2013 Social Science Electronic Publishing, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
FAQ
Terms of Use
Privacy Policy
Copyright
This page was processed by apollo4 in 1.125 seconds