Abstract
Costs of equity for individual firms are estimated in a Bayesian framework using several factor-based pricing models. Substantial prior uncertainty about mispricing often produces an estimated cost of equity close to that obtained with mispricing precluded, even for a stock whose average return departs significantly from the pricing model's prediction. Uncertainty about which pricing model to use is less important, on average, than within-model parameter uncertainty. In the absence of mispricing uncertainty, uncertainty about factor premiums is generally the largest source of overall uncertainty about a firm’s cost of equity, although uncertainty about betas is nearly as important.
Volume
Vol. 54, Issue 1
Page
67 - 121
Year
1999
Categories
Actuarial Applications and Methodologies
Capital Management
Capital Requirements
Financial and Statistical Methods
Risk Pricing and Risk Evaluation Models
Capital Theory
Actuarial Applications and Methodologies
Valuation
Equity Valuation
Publications
Journal of Finance