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Investor Psychology and Tests of Factor Pricing Models
Kent D. Daniel QS; National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER); Northwestern University - Kellogg School of Management David A. Hirshleifer University of California, Irvine - Paul Merage School of Business Avanidhar Subrahmanyam University of California, Los Angeles - Finance Area November 20, 2005 Abstract: We provide a model with overconfident risk neutral investors, and therefore no risk premia, in which a price-based portfolio such as HML earns positive expected returns and loads on fundamental macroeconomic variables. Furthermore, loadings on such portfolios are proxies for mispricing, and therefore forecast cross-sectional returns, even after controlling for characteristics such as book-to-market. Thus, an empirical finding that covariances incrementally predict returns does not distinguish rational factor pricing from a setting with no risk premia. The analysis reconciles the high risk (market betas) of low book-to-market firms with their low expected returns, and offers new empirical implications to distinguish alternative theories.
Keywords: factor models, overconfidence, Fama-French factors, covariance risk JEL Classifications: G00, G10, G12, G15 Working Paper SeriesDate posted: November 26, 2005 ; Last revised: November 26, 2005Suggested CitationContact Information
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