Nonlinearities in stock return prediction: Evidence from South Africa

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Abstract

This research investigates the relationship between firm-specific style attributes and the cross-section of equity returns on the JSE Securities Exchange (JSE) over the period from 1 January 1997 to 31 December 2007. Both linear and nonlinear stock selection models are constructed based on the cross-section of equity returns with firm-specific attributes as model inputs. Both linear and nonlinear models identify book-value-to-price and cash flow-to-price as significant styles attributes that distinguish near-term future share returns on the JSE. The risk-adjusted performance of the nonlinear models is found to be comparable with that of linear models. In terms of artificial neural network modeling, the extended Kalman filter learning rule is found to outperform the traditional backpropagation approach. This finding is consistent with our prior findings on global stock selection. © 2012 The Clute Institute.

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Hodnett, K., Hsieh, H. H., & van Rensburg, P. (2012). Nonlinearities in stock return prediction: Evidence from South Africa. Journal of Applied Business Research, 28(6), 1253–1274. https://doi.org/10.19030/jabr.v28i6.7341

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