Title
Is R-Squared a Measure of Market Inefficiency?
Author(s)
Kewei Hou Kewei Hou (Ohio State University)
Lin Peng Lin Peng (City University of New York)
Wei Xiong Wei Xiong (Princeton University)
Abstract
This paper provides a critical evaluation of a widely made argument that stock prices in markets with lower return R2 are more efficient. We show that in a standard rational expectations model, return R2 is independent of the amount of information incorporated into stock prices. Furthermore, an alternative model in which stock price fluctuations are driven by investor sentiment leads to an opposite prediction that lower return R2 is associated with stronger medium-term price momentum and long-term price reversal, two commonly believed signs of market inefficiency. By examining stock returns both in the U.S. and internationally, we found empirical evidence consistent with this contrasting prediction. Overall, our analysis casts doubt on the argument that low return R2 is a measure of market efficiency.
Creation Date
2013-04
Section URL ID
Paper Number
2013-8
URL
http://wxiong.mycpanel.princeton.edu/papers/R2.pdf
File Function
Jel
G14
Keyword(s)
Stocks, R2, Stock Prices, Market Efficiency
Suppress
false
Series
13