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Long-Horizon Regressions: Theoretical Results and Applications to the Expected Returns/Dividend Yields and Fisher Effect Relations
Rossen Valkanov, Anderson School of Management
ABSTRACT: We analyze several ways of conducting long-horizon regressions, taken from
the empirical literature. Asymptotic arguments are used to show that, in all
cases, the t-statistics do not converge to well-defined distributions, thus explaining
the tendency of long-horizon regressions to find ‘significant” results,
where previous short-term approaches have failed. Moreover, in some cases,
the ordinary least squares estimator is not consistent, and the R^2 cannot be
interpreted as a measure of the goodness of fit. Those results cast doubt
on the conclusions reached by most previous long-horizon regression studies.
We propose a rescaled t-statistic, whose asymptotic distribution is easy to
simulate, and re-visit some of the evidence on the long-horizon predictability
of returns and the long-horizon tests of the Fisher Effect.
SUGGESTED CITATION: Rossen Valkanov,
"Long-Horizon Regressions: Theoretical Results and Applications to the Expected Returns/Dividend Yields and Fisher Effect Relations"
(September 9, 1999).
Finance.
Paper 28-99.
http://repositories.cdlib.org/anderson/fin/28-99
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