An Alternative View of the US Price-Dividend Ratio Dynamics
Abstract
As a necessary condition for the validity of the present value model, the price-dividend ratio must be stationary. However, significant market episodes seem to provide
evidence of prices significantly drifting apart from dividends while other episodes
show prices anchoring back to dividends. This paper investigates the stationarity of
this ratio in the context of a Markov- switching model à la Hamilton (1989) where an
asymmetric speed of adjustment towards a unique attractor is introduced. A three-regime
model displays the best regime identification and reveals that the first part of the 90’s boom (1985-1995) and the post-war period are characterized by a stationary state featuring a slow reverting process to a relatively high attractor. Interestingly, the latter part of the 90’s boom (1996-2000), characterized by a growing price-dividend ratio, is entirely attributed to a stationary regime featuring a highly reverting process to the attractor. Finally, the post-Lehman Brothers episode of the subprime crisis can be classified into a temporary nonstationary regime.