Skip to main content

Why People Disagree About What Drives Stock Prices

Staff Report 683 | Published February 25, 2026

Download PDF

Authors

photo of Andrew Atkeson
Andrew AtkesonConsultant
photo of Jonathan Heathcote
Jonathan HeathcoteMonetary Advisor & Deputy Director
photo of Fabrizio Perri
Fabrizio PerriMonetary Advisor & Deputy Director
Why People Disagree About What Drives Stock Prices

Abstract

We show that, to a first-order approximation, estimates of Shiller’s fundamental price relative to observed price depend only on forecasts of long-horizon expected returns. Researchers using different measures of cash flow and valuation may reach different conclusions about the extent to which values fluctuate excessively relative to fundamentals, but that is only because return forecasts based on different cash-flow-to-value measures will be different. Using U.S. equity data, we demonstrate that the amount of persistence in expected returns, rather than the amount of short-run return predictability, is the key determinant of implied excess volatility. Disagreements about stock market valuation therefore reduce to disagreements about long-run expected returns.