The Accuracy of Parsimonious Equity Valuation Models - Empirical tests of the Dividend Discount, Residual Income and Abnormal Earnings Growth model

In many contexts there is a need for parsimonious valuation models, i.e. technically less complex models that are based on few and readily available input variables. Previous research indicates that the accuracy of such models can be weak, and that the choice of a model specification involves striki...

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Main Authors: Anesten, Sebastian, Möller, Niclas, Skogsvik, Kenth
Format: Report
Language:unknown
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Online Access:http://swoba.hhs.se/hastma/papers/hastma2015_003.pdf
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spelling ftrepec:oai:RePEc:hhb:hastma:2015_003 2024-04-14T08:13:49+00:00 The Accuracy of Parsimonious Equity Valuation Models - Empirical tests of the Dividend Discount, Residual Income and Abnormal Earnings Growth model Anesten, Sebastian Möller, Niclas Skogsvik, Kenth http://swoba.hhs.se/hastma/papers/hastma2015_003.pdf unknown http://swoba.hhs.se/hastma/papers/hastma2015_003.pdf preprint ftrepec 2024-03-19T10:28:40Z In many contexts there is a need for parsimonious valuation models, i.e. technically less complex models that are based on few and readily available input variables. Previous research indicates that the accuracy of such models can be weak, and that the choice of a model specification involves striking a balance between the need for valuation accuracy and modelling simplicity. In this paper we investigate the accuracy of four well-known valuation models - the dividend discount (PVED) model, the residual income valuation (RIV) model and two versions of the abnormal earnings growth (AEG) model – using financial data from a Scandinavian (Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway and Sweden) capital market setting. Measuring the valuation accuracy in terms of both precision and spread, we find that the RIV model in general allows for the best parsimonious model specifications. Incorporating complexity adjustments (longer explicit forecast periods, bankruptcy risk adjustment of discount rates, and elimination of transitory income items) in our most parsimonious models, we find that the valuation accuracy of all models improve. RIV modelling still comes out as the best valuation approach, but the gap to PVED modelling decreases. Despite our complexity adjustments, the AEG models generate poor valuation results and basically cannot be used as valuation benchmarks for our sample of Scandinavian firms. Abnormal earnings growth (AEG) model; Accuracy score; Dividend discount (PVED) model; Equity valuation; Fundamental valuation; Parsimonious modelling; Residual income valuation (RIV) model Report Iceland RePEc (Research Papers in Economics) Norway
institution Open Polar
collection RePEc (Research Papers in Economics)
op_collection_id ftrepec
language unknown
description In many contexts there is a need for parsimonious valuation models, i.e. technically less complex models that are based on few and readily available input variables. Previous research indicates that the accuracy of such models can be weak, and that the choice of a model specification involves striking a balance between the need for valuation accuracy and modelling simplicity. In this paper we investigate the accuracy of four well-known valuation models - the dividend discount (PVED) model, the residual income valuation (RIV) model and two versions of the abnormal earnings growth (AEG) model – using financial data from a Scandinavian (Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway and Sweden) capital market setting. Measuring the valuation accuracy in terms of both precision and spread, we find that the RIV model in general allows for the best parsimonious model specifications. Incorporating complexity adjustments (longer explicit forecast periods, bankruptcy risk adjustment of discount rates, and elimination of transitory income items) in our most parsimonious models, we find that the valuation accuracy of all models improve. RIV modelling still comes out as the best valuation approach, but the gap to PVED modelling decreases. Despite our complexity adjustments, the AEG models generate poor valuation results and basically cannot be used as valuation benchmarks for our sample of Scandinavian firms. Abnormal earnings growth (AEG) model; Accuracy score; Dividend discount (PVED) model; Equity valuation; Fundamental valuation; Parsimonious modelling; Residual income valuation (RIV) model
format Report
author Anesten, Sebastian
Möller, Niclas
Skogsvik, Kenth
spellingShingle Anesten, Sebastian
Möller, Niclas
Skogsvik, Kenth
The Accuracy of Parsimonious Equity Valuation Models - Empirical tests of the Dividend Discount, Residual Income and Abnormal Earnings Growth model
author_facet Anesten, Sebastian
Möller, Niclas
Skogsvik, Kenth
author_sort Anesten, Sebastian
title The Accuracy of Parsimonious Equity Valuation Models - Empirical tests of the Dividend Discount, Residual Income and Abnormal Earnings Growth model
title_short The Accuracy of Parsimonious Equity Valuation Models - Empirical tests of the Dividend Discount, Residual Income and Abnormal Earnings Growth model
title_full The Accuracy of Parsimonious Equity Valuation Models - Empirical tests of the Dividend Discount, Residual Income and Abnormal Earnings Growth model
title_fullStr The Accuracy of Parsimonious Equity Valuation Models - Empirical tests of the Dividend Discount, Residual Income and Abnormal Earnings Growth model
title_full_unstemmed The Accuracy of Parsimonious Equity Valuation Models - Empirical tests of the Dividend Discount, Residual Income and Abnormal Earnings Growth model
title_sort accuracy of parsimonious equity valuation models - empirical tests of the dividend discount, residual income and abnormal earnings growth model
url http://swoba.hhs.se/hastma/papers/hastma2015_003.pdf
geographic Norway
geographic_facet Norway
genre Iceland
genre_facet Iceland
op_relation http://swoba.hhs.se/hastma/papers/hastma2015_003.pdf
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