Stock Returns, Aggregate Earnings Surprises, and Behavioral Finance
- 1 February 2003
- preprint
- Published by Elsevier in SSRN Electronic Journal
Abstract
We study the stock market reaction to aggregate earnings news. Previous research shows that, for individual firms, stock prices react positively to earnings news but require several quarters to fully reflect the information in earnings. We find that the relation between returns and earnings is substantially different in aggregate data. First, returns are unrelated to past earnings, suggesting that prices neither underreact nor overreact to aggregate earnings news. Second, aggregate returns are negatively correlated with concurrent earnings; over the last 30 years, stock prices increased 6.5% in quarters with negative earnings growth and only 1.9% otherwise. This finding suggests that earnings and discount rates move together over time, and provides new evidence that discount-rate shocks explain a significant fraction of aggregate stock returns.Keywords
All Related Versions
This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- By Force of Habit: A Consumption‐Based Explanation of Aggregate Stock Market BehaviorJournal of Political Economy, 1999
- A Model of Investor SentimentPublished by National Bureau of Economic Research ,1997
- A Variance Decomposition for Stock ReturnsThe Economic Journal, 1991
- Evidence that stock prices do not fully reflect the implications of current earnings for future earningsJournal of Accounting and Economics, 1990
- Post-Earnings-Announcement Drift: Delayed Price Response or Risk Premium?Journal of Accounting Research, 1989
- Stock Prices, Earnings, and Expected DividendsThe Journal of Finance, 1988
- The Dividend-Price Ratio and Expectations of Future Dividends and Discount FactorsThe Review of Financial Studies, 1988
- FURTHER EVIDENCE OF THE TIME SERIES PROPERTIES OF ACCOUNTING INCOMEThe Journal of Finance, 1976
- SOME TIME SERIES PROPERTIES OF ACCOUNTING INCOMEThe Journal of Finance, 1972
- An Empirical Evaluation of Accounting Income NumbersJournal of Accounting Research, 1968