Market Anomalies Fail to Replicate

It’s now well known that many findings in social psychology fail to replicate. Social psychologists have often discovered noise rather than fundamental aspects of behavior. A new paper suggests that many market anomalies also fail to replicate. Hou, Xue and Zhang write:

The anomalies literature is infested with widespread p-hacking. We replicate the entire anomalies literature in finance and accounting by compiling a largest-to-date data library that contains 447 anomaly variables. With microcaps alleviated via New York Stock Exchange breakpoints and value-weighted returns, 286 anomalies (64%) including 95 out of 102 liquidity variables (93%) are insignificant at the conventional 5% level. Imposing the cutoff t-value of three raises the number of insignificance to 380 (85%). Even for the 161 significant anomalies, their magnitudes are often much lower than originally reported. Out of the 161, the q-factor model leaves 115 alphas insignificant (150 with t < 3). In all, capital markets are more efficient than previously recognized.

Comments

Comments for this post are closed