Abstract
Fama and French (1992) document a significant relation between firm size, book-to-market ratios, and security returns for nonfinancial firms. Because of their initial interest in leverage as an explanatory variable for security returns, Fama and French exclude from their analysis financial firms, thus creating a natural holdout sample on which to test the robustness of their results. We document that the relation between firm size, book-to-market ratios, and security returns is similar for financial and nonfinancial firms. In addition, we present evidence that survivorship bias does not significantly affect the estimated size or book-to-market premiums in returns. Our results indicate data-snooping and selection biases do not explain the size and book-to-market patterns in returns.
Volume
Vol. 52, Issue 2
Page
875 - 883
Year
1997
Categories
Financial and Statistical Methods
Asset and Econometric Modeling
Asset Classes
Equities
Actuarial Applications and Methodologies
Investments
CAPM
Actuarial Applications and Methodologies
Investments
Portfolio Rebalancing
Actuarial Applications and Methodologies
Investments
Portfolio Strategy
Publications
Journal of Finance