The Role of Assumptions in Ohlson Model Performance: Lessons for Improving Equity-Value Modeling
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Abstract
In this paper, we test whether the short-run econometric conditions for the basic assumptions
of the Ohlson valuation model hold, and then we relate these results with the fulfillment of the
short-run econometric conditions for this model to be effective. Better future modeling motivated
us to analyze to what extent the assumptions involved in this seminal model are not good enough
approximations to solve the firm valuation problem, causing poor model performance. The model is
based on the well-known dividend discount model and the residual income valuation model, and it
adds a linear information model, which is a time series model by nature. Therefore, we adopt the
time series approach. In the presence of non-stationary variables, we focus our research on US-listed
firms for which more than forty years of data with the required cointegration properties to use error
correction models are available. The results show that the clean surplus relation assumption has no
impact on model performance, while the unbiased accounting property assumption has an important
effect on it. The results also emphasize the uselessness of forcing valuation models to match the value
displacement property of dividends.
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Fullana, O., González, M., & Toscano Pardo, D. (2021). The Role of Assumptions in Ohlson Model Performance: Lessons for Improving Equity-Value Modeling. Mathematics, 9(5), 513. DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/math9050513













