Irrational exuberance reconsidered : the cross section of stock returns
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Irrational exuberance reconsidered : the cross section of stock returns
(Springer finance)
Springer-Verlag, c2004
2nd ed
- : hbk
Available at / 12 libraries
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Library, Research Institute for Mathematical Sciences, Kyoto University数研
: hbkKUL||14||1(2)200003619059
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Note
"Originally published 2002 as volume 511 in the series: Lecture notes in economics and mathematical systems, ISBN 3-540-42670-1"--T.p. verso
Original title: Stock market overreaction and fundamental valuation
Bibliography: p. [213]-222
Includes indexes
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Mathias Kulpmann presents a framework to evaluate whether the stock market is in line with underlying fundamentals. The new and revised edition offers an up to date introduction to the controversy between rational asset pricing and behavioural finance. Empirical evidence of stock market overreaction are investigated within the paradigms of rational asset pricing and behavioural finance. Although this monograph will not promise the reader to become a millionaire, it offers a road to obtain a deeper understanding of the forces which drive stock returns. It should be of interest to anyone interested in what drives performance in the stock market.
Table of Contents
I Irrational Exuberance Reconsidered.- 1 Stock Market Overreaction and Portfolio Management - An Interview with Barbara Rega, CFA, and Bernd Meyer, CFA.- 1.1 Fundamental Valuation, Financial Modelling, and the Cross Section of Stock Returns.- 1.2 Equity Risk Premium.- 1.3 Behavioural Finance.- 1.4 Corporate Control.- 1.5 Outlook.- 2 Scope of Analysis.- II Overshooting in the Cross Section of Stock Returns: The Winner-Loser Effect.- 3 Literature.- 3.1 Methodology.- 3.2 Market Efficiency.- 3.3 The Winner-Loser Effect: Explanations.- 3.4 A More Detailed Look at the Literature.- 3.5 Summary.- 4 Empirical Evidence for Germany.- 4.1 The Winner-Loser Hypothesis and the Dataset.- 4.1.1 Hypothesis.- 4.1.2 Dataset.- 4.2 The Standard Approach.- 4.2.1 Evidence for the Pooled Sample.- 4.2.2 Test Methodology.- 4.2.3 Evidence on a Yearly Basis.- 4.2.4 Survivorship Bias.- 4.3 Transition Matrix.- 4.4 Summary.- III Explaining the Cross Section of Stock Returns: CAPM versus Fundamentals.- 5 Explaining the Winner-Loser Effect: Theory.- 5.1 Rational Asset Pricing.- 5.2 Unexpected Changes in Fundamentals and Unexpected Returns.- 5.3 Fundamentals and Rational Asset Pricing.- 5.3.1 Preliminary Remark.- 5.3.2 A Two-Period Framework.- 5.3.3 Expected Excess Returns during the Test Period.- 5.3.4 Excess Returns during the Formation Period.- 5.3.5 Intertemporal Dependence.- 5.3.6 Final Remark and Summary.- 5.4 Summary.- 6 The CAPM and the Winner-Loser Effect.- 6.1 Explaining the Winner-Loser Effect.- 6.1.1 Hypotheses.- 6.1.2 Estimation Results.- 6.1.3 Discussion.- 6.2 Expectation Building.- 6.2.1 Theory.- 6.2.2 Hypothesis and Empirical Results.- 6.2.3 Discussion.- 6.3 Summary.- 7 Fundamentals and the Winner-Loser Effect.- 7.1 Movements in Fundamentals.- 7.1.1 Dividends.- 7.1.2 Profits.- 7.1.3 Profit Components.- 7.1.4 Summary.- 7.2 Differences between the Winner and the Loser Portfolio - A Binary Choice Approach.- 7.2.1 Econometric Methodology.- 7.2.2 Estimation Results.- 7.2.3 Summary.- 7.3 Movements in Fundamentals and Changes in the Exposure to Systematic Risk.- 7.3.1 Hypothesis.- 7.3.2 Results.- 7.3.3 Discussion.- 7.3.4 Summary.- 7.4 Summary.- 8 Fundamentals versus Beta - What Drives Stock Returns?.- 8.1 Fundamentals versus Beta: A Horse Race.- 8.1.1 Hypotheses.- 8.1.2 Estimation Results.- 8.1.3 Summary.- 8.2 Time Horizon and Portfolio Effects, Nonlinearities.- 8.2.1 Hypotheses.- 8.2.2 Estimation Results.- 8.2.3 Discussion.- 8.3 Summary and Outlook.- IV Corporate Control.- 9 Reversals in Stock Returns and Temporary Problems of Corporate Control.- 9.1 Problems of Corporate Control: Hypotheses.- 9.2 Estimation Results.- 9.3 Discussion.- 9.4 Summary.- Conclusion.- References.- Author Index.- About the Author.
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