Duration-Based Stock Valuation

Working Paper: CEPR ID: DP14904

Authors: Jules H. van Binsbergen

Abstract: Interest rates across maturities have dropped to all-time low levels around the world. These unexpected shocks to discount rates have an important effect on the valuation of long duration assets. To quantify this effect, I construct a number of counterfactual fixed income portfolios that match the duration of the dividend strips of the aggregate stock market. I show that such fixed income portfolios have performed as well, if not better, than the U.S. stock market in the past five decades, while exhibiting similar (or higher) levels of volatility. Therefore, investors have received little to no compensation for taking long duration nominal dividend risk in the past half century. Further, if anything, stocks seem to have too little volatility (not excess volatility) compared to these fixed income counterfactuals. I discuss several explanations for these findings, including a secular decline in economic growth rates, dividends' potential to hedge against inflation, as well as the diversification of dividend risk across maturities. These results also have important implications for research on the cross-section of stock returns and capital structure.

Keywords: stock market performance; COVID-19; growth

JEL Codes: No JEL codes provided


Causal Claims Network Graph

Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.


Causal Claims

CauseEffect
Decline in interest rates (E43)Increased stock prices (G19)
Unexpected shocks to discount rates (E43)Valuation of long-duration assets (G19)
Economic growth rates (O57)Valuation of long-duration assets (G19)
Inflation hedging properties of dividends (G35)Valuation of long-duration assets (G19)

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