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Consumption Risk and Expected Stock Returns

January 2003

Following the textbook CCAPM, the consumption risk of an asset is typically measured as the contemporaneous covariance of the marginal utility of consumption and the return on that asset. When measured this way, consumption risk is too small to explain the observed equity premium, is negatively related to expected excess returns over time, and fails to explain the cross-sectional di.erences in average returns of the Fama and French (25) portfolios. This paper evaluates the central insight of the CCAPM -- that consumption risk determines returns -- but take the model less literally by allowing the possibility that households do not instantaneously and completely adjust consumption to the news revealed about wealth in a period. The long-term consumption risk of the aggregate market is signficantly larger than the contemporaneous risk, is positively related to expected excess returns over time, and is highly correlated with the cross-sectional di.erences in average returns of the Fama and French (25) portfolios. 

The paper from the NBER 
The paper from AER
Complete data and programs for replication 

  • Jonathan A. Parker

    Robert C. Merton (1970) Professor of Financial Economics

    MIT Sloan School of Management

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