Spurious Regressions in Financial Economics.pdf
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Spurious Regressions in Financial Economics?
Wayne E. Ferson
University of Washington and NBER
Sergei Sarkissian
McGill University
Timothy Simin
University of Washington
first draft: February 14, 1998
this revision: August 4, 1999
ABSTRACT
We study biases associated with regression models in which persistent lagged variables
predict stock returns, either linearly or in interaction with contemporaneous values of a market
index return. We focus on the issue of spurious regression, related to the classic studies of
Yule (1926) and Granger and Newbold (1974). We find that spurious regression is a concern
in regressions of stock returns on persistent lagged instruments, especially when the
predictable component of returns is large. In regressions where the lagged instruments
interact with a market index return, the spurious regression problem is not as severe. Without
persistent time-variation in the expected market return and beta, spurious regression bias is
not an important issue. However, when a common persistent factor drives expected market
returns and betas, spurious regression becomes a concern. Large sample sizes are no defense
against the spurious regression bias.
Ferson and Simin are from the University of Washington School of Business Administration, Department of
Finance and Business Economics, Box 353200, Seattle, Washington 98195-3200. Ferson may be reached at ph:
(206) 543-1843, fax 685-9392, /apmodels. Sarkissian may be reached at Faculty of
Management, 1001 Sherbrooke Street West, McGill University, Montreal, PQ, Canada H3A 1G5, ph. (514)
398-4876, fax 398-3876, ss@management.mcgill.ca. Simin may be reached at tsimin@, (206)
543-4773. We are grateful t
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