CCAPM Flashcards
1
Q
Father of CCAPM
A
Breeden 1979
2
Q
Lettau Ludvigson 2001 JF
A
- find that consumption, human and non-human wealth are cointegrated.
- Moreover, find that the deviation of consumption from the cointegrated trend forecasts aggregate stock returns at short and long horizons.
- Previous related models, such as Campbell (1984) dividend/price, only forecast returns at long horizons.
3
Q
Lettau Ludvigson 2001 JPE
A
- Model comprised of CAY and the MRP performs about as well as the FF3F in explaining variation in returns among the 25 size-B/M sorted portfolios.
- Includes theoretical arguments linking CAY the CCAPM. Intuition is that households adjust consumption in anticipation of Δ in aggregate wealth (i.e. the market portfolio).
4
Q
Lettau Ludvigson 2004
A
- Challenges textbook finding of Modigliani (1971) that $1 incre in wealth causes 5% incr in consumption.
- Find instead that transitory Δ of wealth, such as those related to the biz cycle, lead to essentially no Δ in consumption.
- Rather it’s permanent shocks to trend of wealth that leads to signif Δ in consumption.
5
Q
Bansal, Dittmar and Lundblad 2005
A
- Show that economic risks in CFs (“CF β”) account for a significant portion of differences in risk premia across assets.
- Measure CF β via a VAR model that includes observed CFs & aggregate consumption growth rates.
6
Q
Yogo 2006
A
- When u() nonseparable in nondurable & durable consump & elasticity of subst btw the two C goods is sufficiently high, MU rises when durable C falls.
- Small & value stks deliver relatively low R during recessions, when durable C falls –> high avg R relative to large & value stks
- Stk returns unE low at biz cycle troughs, when durable C falls sharply; explains countercyclical variation in the ERP
7
Q
Lettau and Van Nieuwerburgh 2008
A
- Find strong empiric evidence of shifts in steady state mean of the economy
- Δ in the steady state make in-sample return forecastability of adj fin ratios hard to exploit out-of-sample.
- Uncertainty of est the size of steady-state shifts rather than the estimation of their dates is responsible for the difficulty of forecasting stock returns in real time.
8
Q
Savov 2011
A
- A new measure of C, garbage, is more volatile and more correlated with stocks than the canonical measure (NIPA) consumption expenditure. A garbage-based CCAPM matches the U.S. equity premium with relative risk aversion of 17 versus 81 and evades the joint equity premium-risk-free rate puzzle. These results carry through to European data. In a cross-section of size, value, and industry portfolios, garbage growth is priced and drives out NIPA expenditure growth.