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The Intrinsic Value of the Dow: This Time with Feeling!

The Intrinsic Value of the Dow: This Time with Feeling!. P Dunne, J Forker , A Zholos Seminar: Trinity College Dublin – Nov 2009. Motivation. The stock market and sentiment? Asset pricing theory weak on sentiment… Fundamental valuation...Lee et al. (1999) ignores sentiment and ambiguity

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The Intrinsic Value of the Dow: This Time with Feeling!

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  1. The Intrinsic Value of the Dow: This Time with Feeling! P Dunne, J Forker, A Zholos Seminar: Trinity College Dublin – Nov 2009

  2. Motivation • The stock market and sentiment? • Asset pricing theory weak on sentiment… • Fundamental valuation...Lee et al.(1999) • ignores sentiment and ambiguity • Irrational exuberance….Shiller (1981, 1990, 2005) • Excess volatility puzzle • Bubbles spill-over…… Prado & Qin (2009)

  3. Mon-policy / asset price debate Bernanke & Gertler (2001), concluded that; • Central Banks should set interest rates in response to forecast inflation and the output gap, but that they should not react directly to movements in asset prices. Other views:TheCecchetti report states that; • (i) Central Banks can achieve superior performance by adjusting policy instruments in response to asset prices with the caveat that an understanding as to why asset prices have changed is required • (ii) “asset price misalignments may be difficult to measure, but this is no reason to ignore them.”

  4. Can fundamental analysis help? • Can we use fundamental analysis along with measures of sentiment and risk to explain “why asset prices have changed”? • Disagreement exists about how to do fundamental analysis and even about capital asset pricing

  5. Capital Asset Pricing • CAPM assumes a single risk factor • But alternatives in favour today • APT • Fama-French 3 Factor model • Campbell “Good Beta, Bad Beta” • It would be good if CAPM worked • Advantage of ‘Single factor’ and ‘single risky portfolio’ for investment • Fewer unknown parameters so easier to use it for fundamental analysis

  6. Sentiment • Can we separate sentiment effects from fundamentals? • Can Sentiment be represented • A risk Factor? • A control variable? • An ECM term? • An instrument for risk aversion?

  7. What we do! • Propose and test a method to obtain a risk premium that is clean of sentiment (or uncertainty effects). • To do this we must appeal to; • a reinstatement of the CAPM, • the idea of ‘Bellwether stocks’, • various ex-ante variables that are seldom used in fundamental analysis.

  8. Estimates of risk premium If we assume earnings follow random walk Plus drift g E = Monthly IBES analysts core earnings expectations rf = Risk free rate  = Forward Looking betas for each firm each period from Options see. Christensen et al.

  9. Estimates of risk premium Market beta=1 rf *= Risk free rate adjusted for expected dividend yield

  10. Estimates of risk premium Market beta=1 Solve for premium given other info And assuming a random walk Earnings rf *= Risk free rate adjusted for expected dividend yield

  11. Backed-out premium for the market: Jan 1996 – Mar 2004

  12. This premium is not right! • It becomes negative? • It is too variable • It has the wrong relationship with systematic volatility • VIX is a measure of risk implied by option on the S&P index • It should be a good indicator of the amount of systematic risk in existence

  13. Backed-out premium for the market: Jan 1996 – Mar 2004 VIX Decline in implied risk premium could simply reflect an over-valued market

  14. Inverse of the VIX index against the implied risk-premium from market index 1/

  15. So the risk-premium associated with market index is probably missing control variables or the market is contaminated by sentiment/uncertainty/ambiguity/bubble • Using Market premium will miss-value most stocks • It is also difficult to get a reliable ex-ante beta for most stocks • Most stocks are not well described by the simple CAPM • Could this just be reflecting the contamination from sentiment?

  16. Support for alternative… • Option-implied beta is source of accurate ex-ante beta for stocks immune to sentiment… • Lemmon & Ni (2008) • In certain regimes the simple CAPM works….. • Chung & Yeh (2009) • Perhaps there exists an “easy-to-value” assets with insignificant sensitivity to other factors/sentiment • Baker & Wurgler (2007) + Epstein & Schneider(2006) • The stock we found to be best source of a reliable risk premium is a well known ‘bellwether’ stock ‘CAT’

  17. Conditions required for sentiment free implied premium • “Easy-to-value” asset…..‘Bellwether’ • Unaffected by market sentiment & other factors • For which a CAPM single-factor model fits • One for which an accurate ex-ante, forward looking beta can be estimated from options • One for which the permanent-transitory decomposition of earnings is reliable

  18. “Asset-specific” implied premium Solve, given Earnings Forecast

  19. “Asset-specific” implied premium We have monthly IBES ‘core’ earnings forecasts (2 year ahead)

  20. “Asset-specific” implied premium We obtained ‘option implied’ betas for the stocks in the DJ 30 Index Source: Christoffersen et al., (2008)

  21. Option implied betas • Chang, Chrisstoffersen, Jacob & Vainberg (2009) These may suffer from slight bias due to the fact that they are derived under the assumption of risk-neutrality….

  22. Example of “option-implied beta”

  23. “Asset-specific” implied premium But earnings forecasts are not just a random walk!

  24. “Asset-specific” implied premium And dividend policy matters! Assume growth = an estimated drift?

  25. Decomposition of earnings forecast Random walk + noise + measurement error • UC “trend-cycle” model • Method: Kalman Filter The decomposition is important for what comes out as the implied premium! Transitory doesn’t contribute as much to value as permanent High persistence of shocks to transitory will give them greater role

  26. Decomposition of earnings forecast

  27. Decomposition of monthly earnings • We apply a Kalman Filter to this unobserved components model • The decomposition is sensitive to assumptions about • We applied this to a stock that gave promising results using a more simple ARIMA modelling • We end-up selecting a UC-ARMA(1,12)

  28. The Earnings Data - Caterpillar

  29. Drift terms

  30. Log “Trend component” and log forecast earnings Persistent transitory deviations from stochastic trend

  31. Valuing the 2 Earnings components The stationary part must be projected forward at each valuation time

  32. The backed-out “CAT” premium

  33. PremCAT Vs PremMKT

  34. PremCAT Vs inverse-VIX R²=0.13

  35. PremCAT on sent-index (various) • R²=0.000 • Tried various non-linear transformations of sentiment

  36. Recall • These are both timely “ex-ante” premia! • So they would be sensitive to change in forecasts of fundamentals, changes from option implied betas and changes in the price of the bellwether equity pricing. • Variables that can be monitored “real-time”

  37. Back to accounting valuations • Using a fundamental valuation approach with • Premium based on CATERPILLAR • Premium based on MKT • What does sentiment variable add? • Does it matter if we use other controls? Fama-French?

  38. Simple empirical model • Step 1: Cointegration Monthly IBES core FY2 earnings Risk free rate – expected div yield FL betas for each firm each period Backed out for CAT

  39. Simple empirical model • Step 1: Cointegration with sentiment

  40. Step 2: ECM • Using the ECM terms from step 1 • Assuming that contemporaneous earnings shocks can be included –i.e., weak exogeneity • including dummy for end-year effects • ECM terms are negative and significant • Explanatory power good • Sentiment seems to be another driver of returns in path to equilibrium

  41. ECM

  42. ECM R² • Without sentiment With sentiment • AXP 0.043 0.116 • HPQ 0.113 0.166 • HD 0.081 0.100 • IBM 0.015 0.033 • MCD -0.008 0.032 • MSFT 0.683 0.886

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