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John H. Cochrane, The Dog That Did Not Bark: A Defense of Return Predictability, The Review of Financial Studies, Volume 21, Issue 4, July 2008, Pages 1533–1575, https://doi.org/10.1093/rfs/hhm046
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Abstract
If returns are not predictable, dividend growth must be predictable, to generate the observed variation in divided yields. I find that the absence of dividend growth predictability gives stronger evidence than does the presence of return predictability. Long-horizon return forecasts give the same strong evidence. These tests exploit the negative correlation of return forecasts with dividend-yield autocorrelation across samples, together with sensible upper bounds on dividend-yield autocorrelation, to deliver more powerful statistics. I reconcile my findings with the literature that finds poor power in long-horizon return forecasts, and with the literature that notes the poor out-of-sample R2 of return-forecasting regressions.