Objective research and reviews to aid investing decisions
If noise is a significant component of stock prices, does a portfolio that favors large market capitalization stocks automatically underperform? In the May 2006 draft of their paper entitled "Pricing Noise, Rejecting the CAPM and the Size and Value Effects", Robert Arnott and Jason Hsu examine the implications of a very simple model that assumes stock prices deviate from fundamental value based on a single source of unknown risk (noise). They assume the deviations revert to a mean of zero, with no long-term effect on stock returns. Based on this model, they conclude that:
In summary, small capitalization value investing works by systematically buying negative noise and selling positive noise.
For related research, see Blog Synthesis: The Value Premium and Blog Synthesis: The Size Effect. See also our blog entry of 3/15/05 on the systematic underperformance of capitalization-weighted portfolios based on an explanation very similar to that described above.