Penetrating the Book‐to‐Market Black Box: The R&D Effect
Baruch Lev and
Theodore Sougiannis
Journal of Business Finance & Accounting, 1999, vol. 26, issue 3‐4, 419-449
Abstract:
The book‐to‐market (BM) phenomenon – the positive association between BM and subsequent returns – looms large among capital market enigmas. Economic theory postulates that the difference between market and book values of companies reflects their future abnormal profits. We capture these abnormal profits for a large sample of science‐based companies by estimating the value of the off‐balance sheet investment generating those profits – the value of R&D capital – and show empirically: (i) Firms’ R&D capital is associated with their subsequent stock returns. (ii) For R&D intensive firms, this ‘R&D effect’ subsumes the ‘book‐to‐market effect.’ (iii) The association between R&D and subsequent returns appears to result from an extra‐market risk factor inherent in R&D, rather than from stock mispricing. We thus provide an explanation for the book‐to‐market phenomenon of R&D companies.
Date: 1999
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:bla:jbfnac:v:26:y:1999:i:3-4:p:419-449
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