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ANOMALIES AND NEWS JOEY ENGELBERG (UCSD) R. DAVID MCLEAN (GEORGETOWN) JEFFREY PONTIFF (BOSTON COLLEGE) 11TH ANNUAL HEDGE FUND CONFERENCE DECEMBER 8, 2016 Background and Motivation 2 Academic research has uncovered many predictors of cross-sectional stock returns E.g., long-term reversal, size, momentum, book-to-market, accruals, and post-earnings drift. This “anomalies” research goes back to at least Blume and Husick (1973) Yet 43 years later, academics still cannot agree on what causes this return predictability See the 2013 Nobel Prize Important Question: What explains cross-sectional return predictability? Theories of Stock Return Predictability 3 Three popular explanations for cross-sectional predictability Differences in discount rates, e.g., Fama (1991, 1998) Mispricing, e.g., Barberis and Thaler (2003) Data-mining, e.g., Fama (1998) This Paper: Uses 97 anomalies along with firm-specific news and earnings announcements to differentiate between the three explanations The Discount Rate Story 4 Cross-sectional return predictability is expected The predictability may be surprising to academics, but it is not to other market participants Ex-post return differences reflect ex-ante differences in discount rates There are no surprises here Ex-post returns were completely expected by rational investors ex-ante E.g., Fama and French (1992, 1996) Discount Rates and News 5 Anomaly Returns around an Earnings Announcement 0.015 0.01 Long Short 0.005 0 -5 -0.005 -0.01 -0.015 -4 -3 -2 -1 0 1 2 3 4 5 Mispricing – Biased Expectations 6 Investors have systematically biased expectations of cash flows and cash flow growth Expectations are too high for some stocks, too low for others The anomaly variables are correlated with such expectations New information causes investors to update their beliefs, which corrects prices, and creates the return-predictability. Goes to back to at least (Basu, 1977) Mispricing and News 7 Anomaly Returns around an Earnings Announcement 0.06 Long 0.04 Short 0.02 0 -5 -0.02 -0.04 -0.06 -4 -3 -2 -1 0 1 2 3 4 5 Data Mining 8 As Fama (1991) suggests, academics have likely tested thousands of variables It’s not surprising to find that some predict returns in-sample Realization of a “multiple testing bias” in empirical research dates at least back to Bonferroni (1935) This is stressed more recently in the finance literature by Harvey, Lin, and Zhu (2015). Mispricing vs. Data Mining 9 Most anomalies focus on monthly returns Stocks with high (low) monthly returns likely had good (bad) news during the month A spurious anomaly would therefore likely perform better insample on earnings days and news days Do anomaly strategies still have high returns on news and earnings days after controlling for this? Our Findings 10 Anomaly returns are higher by 7x on earnings announcement days 2x on corporate news days Returns in Event Time (3-day window) 11 Financial Analysts 12 We also examine financial analysts’ forecasts errors For stocks in long portfolios, forecasts are too low For stocks in the short portfolios, forecasts are too high Interpretation – Difficult to Reconcile with Risk 13 Hard to tie stock-price reactions to firm-specific news to systematic risk Anomalies do worse on days when macroeconomic news is announced Anomalies do worse when market returns are higher, i.e., anomalies have a negative market beta Risk cannot explain the analyst forecast error results Interpretation – Not (just) Data Mining 14 A spurious anomaly would likely perform better insample on earnings days and news days However, controlling for contemporaneous monthly return, anomalies still perform better on news days Out-of-sample anomalies perform better on news days and have the forecast error results The relation between anomalies and news is stronger in small stocks Interpretation – Consistent with Mispricing 15 The results are easy to explain with a simple behavioral theory of biased expectations Expectations are too high for some stocks, too low for others The anomaly variables are correlated with such expectations New information causes investors to update their beliefs, which corrects prices, and creates the return-predictability. The analyst forecast error results fit this framework too Our Place in the Literature 16 We build on previous studies showing anomalies predict returns on earnings announcement days E.g., Chopra Lakonishok and Ritter (1992), La Porta et al. (1994), and Sloan (1996) Edelen, Kadlec, and Ince (2015) – anomalies and institutions Our paper: Investigates 6 million news days that are not earnings announcements Uses 97 anomalies – compare across anomaly types Relates a large sample of anomalies to analyst forecast errors Develops new data-mining tests The Anomalies 17 Choosing the Anomalies The list is from McLean and Pontiff (2016) The anomaly has to be documented in an academic study Primarily top 3 finance journals Can be constructed with COMPUSTAT, CRSP, and IBES data Cross-sectional predictors only The Anomalies 18 97 in Anomalies in Total Oldest: Blume and Husic (1973) Stocks sorted each month into long and short quintiles 16 of the 97 variables are binary Can be replicated with CRSP, COMPUSTAT and I/B/E/S Average pairwise correlation of anomaly returns is low (.05) The Sample 19 Earnings announcements from COMPUSTAT Corporate news from the Dow Jones Archive Used in Tetlock (2010) Sample period is 1979-2013 40,220,437 firm-day observations in total The Sample 20 Aggregate Anomaly Variables 21 We construct 3 aggregate anomaly variables The variables are the sum of the number of stock i’s anomaly portfolio memberships in month t Long, Net Short, and Net = Long - Short Aggregate Anomaly Variables 22 Variable Mean Std. Dev. Min Max Long 8.61 5.07 0 35 Short 9.21 5.93 0 45 Net -0.61 6.10 -36 32 The Main Specification 23 Main Specification 24 Economic Magnitudes 25 Net = 10 No Earnings Day Earnings Day Annualized Buy and Daily Basis Points Hold Return 2.59 6.7% 22.39 75.7% Long and Short Separately 26 Economic Magnitudes 27 Long = 10 No Earnings Day Earnings Day Annualized Buy and Daily Basis Points Hold Return 3.69 9.7% 2.56 90.5% Short = 10 No Earnings Day Earnings Day Annualized Buy and Daily Basis Points Hold Return -1.93 -5% -19.62 -72% Robustness 28 Are the results related to a day of the week effect (Birru, 2016)? Controlling for day-of-week does not alter our findings Macroeconomic news (Savor and Wilson, 2016)? Perhaps firm-specific news reflects systematic risk? No, anomalies do worse on macro announcement days Endogeneity of news? Stock return volatility causes news? We control for daily volatility and nothing changes Anomaly Types 29 The effects are robust across anomaly types 1. Event – Corporate events, changes in performance, downgrades 2. Fundamental – constructed only with accounting data 3. Market – Constructed only with market data and no accounting data 4. Valuation – Ratios of market values to fundamentals Robust Across Anomaly Types 30 Analyst Forecast Errors 31 Biased expectations suggests biases in analysts’ earnings forecasts, risk does not Forecasts should be too low for stocks on the long side of the anomaly portfolios. Forecasts should be too high for stocks on the short side of the predictor portfolios. Analysts’ Forecast Error 32 Data Mining Tests 33 A spurious anomaly would likely perform better in-sample on earnings days and news days Stocks with high (low) monthly returns likely had good (bad) news during the month Do anomaly strategies still have high returns on news and earnings days after controlling for this? Data Mining Tests 34 Data Mining Tests – Analyst Forecast Errors 35 Conclusions 36 Evidence of cross-sectional return-predictability goes back at least 43 years to Blume and Husick (1973) – still disagreement over why In this paper we provide evidence that the cross-section of stock returns is best explained by a cross-section of biased expectations. Anomaly returns 9x on info days Anomaly signal predicts analyst forecast errors Difficult to explain the results with risk Harder to rule out data mining, but it does not seem to explain the full effects