Abstract
We model consumption and dividend growth rates as containing (1) a small long-run predictable component, and (2) fluctuating economic uncertainty (consumption volatility). These dynamics, for which we provide empirical support, in conjunction with Epstein and Zin's (1989) preferences, can explain key asset markets phenomena. In our economy, financial markets dislike economic uncertainty and better long-run growth prospects raise equity prices. The model can justify the equity premium, the risk-free rate, and the volatility of the market return, risk-free rate, and the price2013dividend ratio. As in the data, dividend yields predict returns and the volatility of returns is time-varying.
Volume
59
Page
1481-1509
Number
4
Year
2004
Categories
CAPM/Asset Pricing
Publications
Journal of Finance