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Are equities real(ly) options? Understanding the size, book-to-market and earnings-to-price factors

Research output: Working paper

Published

Standard

Are equities real(ly) options? Understanding the size, book-to-market and earnings-to-price factors. / Pope, P F; Stark, A W.
Lancaster University: The Department of Accounting and Finance, 1999. (Accounting and Finance Working Paper Series).

Research output: Working paper

Harvard

Pope, PF & Stark, AW 1999 'Are equities real(ly) options? Understanding the size, book-to-market and earnings-to-price factors' Accounting and Finance Working Paper Series, The Department of Accounting and Finance, Lancaster University.

APA

Pope, P. F., & Stark, A. W. (1999). Are equities real(ly) options? Understanding the size, book-to-market and earnings-to-price factors. (Accounting and Finance Working Paper Series). The Department of Accounting and Finance.

Vancouver

Pope PF, Stark AW. Are equities real(ly) options? Understanding the size, book-to-market and earnings-to-price factors. Lancaster University: The Department of Accounting and Finance. 1999. (Accounting and Finance Working Paper Series).

Author

Pope, P F ; Stark, A W. / Are equities real(ly) options? Understanding the size, book-to-market and earnings-to-price factors. Lancaster University : The Department of Accounting and Finance, 1999. (Accounting and Finance Working Paper Series).

Bibtex

@techreport{b840f33794614720aea5a3f79dfb0c62,
title = "Are equities real(ly) options? Understanding the size, book-to-market and earnings-to-price factors",
abstract = "We model the value of a firm facing irreversible investment opportunities as a portfolio of real call options: options to invest and options to produce. Theory predicts that the expected return on the firm s equity is dependent on (i) the CAPM beta of the assets underlying the options; and (ii) the average elasticity of the options. The average option elasticity depends on volatility, the level of demand and the degree of excess capacity. Our analysis, based on a large scale simulation experiment, confirms these predictions. Additionally we show that the factors analyzed by Fama and French (1992) - beginning-of-period market value of equity, book-to-market equity and earnings-to-price - are strongly associated with the CAPM beta of the underlying assets, volatility, the level of demand and the degree of excess capacity. The links to (unobservable) model fundamentals provide a clear economic rationale for the Fama and French risk factors, but they do not require an appeal to the pricing of bankruptcy risk.",
author = "Pope, {P F} and Stark, {A W}",
year = "1999",
language = "English",
series = "Accounting and Finance Working Paper Series",
publisher = "The Department of Accounting and Finance",
type = "WorkingPaper",
institution = "The Department of Accounting and Finance",

}

RIS

TY - UNPB

T1 - Are equities real(ly) options? Understanding the size, book-to-market and earnings-to-price factors

AU - Pope, P F

AU - Stark, A W

PY - 1999

Y1 - 1999

N2 - We model the value of a firm facing irreversible investment opportunities as a portfolio of real call options: options to invest and options to produce. Theory predicts that the expected return on the firm s equity is dependent on (i) the CAPM beta of the assets underlying the options; and (ii) the average elasticity of the options. The average option elasticity depends on volatility, the level of demand and the degree of excess capacity. Our analysis, based on a large scale simulation experiment, confirms these predictions. Additionally we show that the factors analyzed by Fama and French (1992) - beginning-of-period market value of equity, book-to-market equity and earnings-to-price - are strongly associated with the CAPM beta of the underlying assets, volatility, the level of demand and the degree of excess capacity. The links to (unobservable) model fundamentals provide a clear economic rationale for the Fama and French risk factors, but they do not require an appeal to the pricing of bankruptcy risk.

AB - We model the value of a firm facing irreversible investment opportunities as a portfolio of real call options: options to invest and options to produce. Theory predicts that the expected return on the firm s equity is dependent on (i) the CAPM beta of the assets underlying the options; and (ii) the average elasticity of the options. The average option elasticity depends on volatility, the level of demand and the degree of excess capacity. Our analysis, based on a large scale simulation experiment, confirms these predictions. Additionally we show that the factors analyzed by Fama and French (1992) - beginning-of-period market value of equity, book-to-market equity and earnings-to-price - are strongly associated with the CAPM beta of the underlying assets, volatility, the level of demand and the degree of excess capacity. The links to (unobservable) model fundamentals provide a clear economic rationale for the Fama and French risk factors, but they do not require an appeal to the pricing of bankruptcy risk.

M3 - Working paper

T3 - Accounting and Finance Working Paper Series

BT - Are equities real(ly) options? Understanding the size, book-to-market and earnings-to-price factors

PB - The Department of Accounting and Finance

CY - Lancaster University

ER -