Replication data for: By Force of Habit: A Consumption-Based Explanation of Aggregate Stock Market Behavior
hdl:1902.1/DTIALUVLGM UNF:3:0awoLDm/Dy6gYy+DQnNXSA==
Version: 1 – Released: Mon Dec 03 10:04:47 EST 2007
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Original Publication
Results found in this publication can be replicated using these data.
Campbell, John Y.; Cochrane, John H., 1999, "By force of habit: a consumption-based explanation of aggregate stock market behavior," The Journal of Political Economy, Vol 107, pages 205-251: article available here
Data Citation Details
Study Global IDhdl:1902.1/DTIALUVLGM
AuthorsJohn Y. Campbell (Harvard University); John Cochrane
ProducerJohn Y. Campbell
Funding AgencyNational Science Foundation; Graduate School of Business of the University of Chicago
DistributorMurray Research Archive Logo
Distributor Contactmra_support@help.hmdc.harvard.edu
Distribution Date2007
Deposit DateJune, 2207
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Abstract and Scope
Abstract

We present a consumption-based model that explains a wide variety of dynamic asset pricing phenomena, including the procyclical variation of stock prices, the long-horizon predictability of excess stock returns, and the countercyclical variation of stock market volatility. The model captures much of the history of stock prices from consumption data. It explains the short-and long-run equity premium puzzles despite a low and constant risk-free rate. The results are essentially the same whether we model stocks as a claim to volatile dividends poorly correlated with consumption. The model is driven by an independently and identically distributed consumption growth process and adds a slow- moving external habit to the standard power utility function. These features generate slow countercyclical variations in risk premia. The model posits a fundamentally novel description of risk premia: Investors fear stock primarily because they do poorly in recessions unrelated to the risks of long-run average consumption growth.

KeywordsRisk; Stock-Prices
Topic ClassificationContributed; Economics; John Campbell; Economic theory (LCSH); Replication
Data Availability
Number of Files 43
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NotesDATAPASS:TERMS:STANDARD:1.0 (STANDARD DEPOSIT TERMS 1.0) This study was deposited under the of the Data-PASS standard deposit terms. A copy of the usage agreement is included in the file section of this study.