Do Envious CEOs Cause Merger Waves?
- 13 November 2009
- journal article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in The Review of Financial Studies
- Vol. 23 (2) , 487-517
- https://doi.org/10.1093/rfs/hhp088
Abstract
Welch and Goyal (2008) find that numerous economic variables with in-sample predictive ability for the equity premium fail to deliver consistent out-of-sample forecasting gains relative to the historical average. Arguing that model uncertainty and instability seriously impair the forecasting ability of individual predictive regression models, we recommend combining individual forecasts. Combining delivers statistically and economically significant out-of-sample gains relative to the historical average consistently over time. We provide two empirical explanations for the benefits of forecast combination: (i) combining forecasts incorporates information from numerous economic variables while substantially reducing forecast volatility; (ii) combination forecasts are linked to the real economy.Keywords
This publication has 53 references indexed in Scilit:
- Corporate Serial Acquisitions: An Empirical Test of the Learning HypothesisSSRN Electronic Journal, 2007
- Asymmetric correlations of equity portfoliosJournal of Financial Economics, 2002
- Asymmetric Volatility and Risk in Equity MarketsThe Review of Financial Studies, 2000
- Are Mega-Mergers Anticompetitive? Evidence from the First Great Merger WaveThe RAND Journal of Economics, 1998
- The Profit-Structure Relationship in Banking--Tests of Market-Power and Efficient-Structure HypothesesJournal of Money, Credit and Banking, 1995
- Pay, Performance, and Turnover of Bank CEOsJournal of Labor Economics, 1990
- The Fair Wage-Effort Hypothesis and UnemploymentThe Quarterly Journal of Economics, 1990
- The Price-Concentration Relationship in BankingThe Review of Economics and Statistics, 1989
- Determinants of Executive CompensationIndustrial Relations: A Journal of Economy and Society, 1981
- Towards an understanding of inequity.The Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology, 1963