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Consumer Confidence and Asset Prices: Some Empirical Evidence

Michael L. Lemmon1; Evgenia Portniaguina2

1 University of Utah · 2 University of Oklahoma

Review of Financial Studies 2006

We explore the time-series relationship between investor sentiment and the small-stock premium using consumer confidence as a measure of investor optimism. We estimate the components of consumer confidence related to economic fundamentals and investor sentiment. After controlling for the time variation of beta, we study the time-series variation of the pricing error with sentiment. Over the last 25 years, investor sentiment measured using consumer confidence forecasts the returns of small stocks and stocks with low institutional ownership in a manner consistent with the predictions of models based on noise-trader sentiment. Sentiment does not appear to forecast time-series variation in the value and momentum premiums. (JEL G10, G12, G14)

DOI
10.1093/rfs/hhj038
Volume
19 (4)
Pages
1499-1529
Language
en
Export
BibTeX
Sources
openalex crossref