Research Insights

Predicting Fraud by Investment Managers

Predicting Fraud by Investment Managers Stephen Dimmock and William Gerken A recent version of the paper  can be found here. Abstract: We test the predictability [...]

Quantitative Value vs. Magic Formula Stocks

Here is a quick screen comparison between our Quantitative Value (described here) and the Magic Formula (screen results from here): click to enlarge click to enlarge [...]

Returns to Buying Negative TEV Firms

Who doesn't love the idea of buying something for nothing? Jack and I were intrigued with the concept of something for nothing and took a shot at [...]

The Death of Twitter Trading?

Almost a year ago, we posted a few articles on strategies focused on using Twitter as a mechanism to trade stocks. Our basic conclusion was [...]

Calculating Value Portfolios–Why Details Matter

The Devil in HML's Details Cliff Asness and Andrea Frazzni http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2054749 Key Points: Using a more real-time estimate for book-to-market (B/M) matters. Alphas from using [...]

Do Cash-Adjusted P/E Ratios Work?

A guest speaker in my lecture last week mentioned something interesting: Apple looks like a growth stock on a P/E basis, but when you strip [...]

The Costs of Active Management

The Turnkey PhD and I were talking this afternoon about how egregious fees can get in the active money management business, with managers routinely charging [...]

Predicting anomaly returns with politics, weather, global warming, sunspots, and the stars

Ferson, Sarkissian and Simin (2003) warn that persistence in expected returns generates spurious regression bias in predictive regressions of stock returns, even though stock returns are themselves only weakly auto correlated. Despite this fact a growing literature attempts to explain the performance of stock market anomalies with highly persistent investor sentiment. The data suggest, however, that the potential misspecification bias may be large. Predictive regressions of real returns on simulated regressors are too likely to reject the null of independence, and it is far too easy to find real variables that have “significant power” predicting returns. Standard OLS predictive regressions find that the party of the U.S. President, cold weather in Manhattan, global warming, the El Nino phenomenon, atmospheric pressure in the Arctic, the conjunctions of the planets, and sunspots, all have “significant power” predicting the performance of anomalies. These issues appear particularly acute for anomalies prominent in the sentiment literature, including those formed on the basis of size, distress, asset growth, investment, profitability, and idiosyncratic volatility. 

Debt burdens are painful!

Reinhart (and another Reinhart) and Rogoff have another paper in their series about "Why debt sucks."The title of their newest work is "Debt Overhangs: Past [...]

Valueinvestorsclub.com Performance Update

If you are unfamiliar with Valueinvestorsclub.com and you call yourself a "value investor," you've been missing out on the greatest value communities of all time. [...]

Out of this world Macroeconomic Data

Measuring Economic Growth from Outer Space Vernon Henderson, Adam Storeygard, and David Weil. A recent version of the paper can be found here. Abstract: GDP [...]

Risk Parity for Dummies

Risk parity asset allocation systems seem to be all the rage these days. If you are unfamiliar with the strategy, Mebane Faber has some great [...]

Exploiting Option Information in the Equity Market

Exploiting Option Information in the Equity Market Guido Baltussen, Bart Van Der Grient, Wilma De Groot, Erik Hennink and Weili Zhou http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2001461 Key Points: Long/Short [...]

Are stock pickers better than Computers?

Empiritrage has a detailed research piece on the question of whether or not quantitative value can beat fundamental stock-pickers. http://empiritrage.com/2012/03/24/man-vs-machine-quantitative-value-or-fundamental-value/ Here are a few highlights: [...]

Doing well by doing good? Employee satisfaction update

A while ago we highlighted a very interesting paper by Alex Edmans: https://alphaarchitect.com/2011/04/satisfying-employees-a-satisfying-investment-strategy/ Alex has published a version of the paper that looks at the [...]

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