Blog - Investing Notes
April 24, 2008 - Cash Flow Trumps Discount Rate in Stock Valuations?
Are expected cash flows (earnings) or expected discount rates (risk tolerance)
more important in determining stock valuations? In the April 2008 version of
their paper entitled "What
Drives Stock Price Movement?", Long Chen and Xinlei Zhao investigate the
relative importance of cash flows and discount rates in equity valuation by
studying the relationships among proportional stock price change, cash flow
news and discount rate news at firm and aggregate levels. They make a critical
assumption that analyst earnings forecasts are accurate and timely measures
of investor beliefs regarding future cash flows. Using quarterly stock price
data and contemporaneous prevailing earnings forecasts over the period 1985
through 2006, they conclude that:
- Cash flow news significantly drives stock returns, with an importance that
increases with investment horizon, at both firm and aggregate levels.
- At the aggregate level, the portion of returns
attributable to cash flow news is 16% at a quarterly horizon, 26% at an
annual horizon, 46% at
a two-year horizon, 63% at a three-year horizon and 80% at a seven-year
horizon.
- At the firm level, the average portion of stock
returns attributable to cash flow news is 25% at a quarterly horizon,
69% at a two-year horizon, 76% at
a three-year horizon and 84% at a seven-year horizon.
- The conventional wisdom that cash flow news dominates at the firm level
but discount rate news dominates at the aggregate level derives from flawed
estimation methods.
- Further, stock returns relate positively to cash flow news at both firm
and aggregate levels.
- Aggregate stock returns and cash flow news have
positive correlations of 0.26 at a quarterly horizon, 0.41 at an annual
horizon, 0.86 at a three-year horizon and 0.98 at a seven-year horizon.
- Average firm level stock returns and cash flow
news have correlations of 0.25 at a quarterly horizon, 0.52 at an annual
horizon and 0.79 at a seven-year horizon.
- The correlation between aggregate cash flow news and discount rate news
is negative (-0.35) at a quarterly horizon.
In summary, cash flow expectations represent a significant positively correlated
component of stock returns at both firm and aggregate levels. Their importance
grows with investment horizon, dominating discount rate expectations for horizons
over three years.
For related research, see Blog
Synthesis: Valuation Based on Fundamentals.