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296 LAKONISHOK, SHLEIFER, VISHNY


several measures of past growth, including earnings, cash flow, sales, and
stock return, glamour stocks grew substantially faster than value stocks
over the five years before portfolio formation. Finally, Panel C shows that
over the five postformation years the relative growth of fundamentals for
glamour stocks was much less impressive. Indeed, over years +2 to +5 rela-
tive to formation the growth rates of fundamentals for the value portfolio
were often higher. This deterioration of relative growth rates of glamour
stocks compared to past relative growth and expected future relative
growth is explored more systematically below.
To interpret differences in financial ratios such as C/P and E/P in terms of
expected growth rates, we come back to Gordon’s formula (Gordon and
Shapiro 1956). Recall that for cash flow, this formula can be rewritten as
ρC(+1)/P=r−g, where C(+1) is one period ahead cash flow, Pis the cur-
rent stock price, ris the required rate of return on the stock, gis the ex-
pected growth rate of cash flow, and ρ, the payout ratio for cash flows, is
the constant fraction of cash flows received as dividends. An identical for-
mula applies for earnings, under the assumption that dividends are also
some fixed fraction of earnings. Taken literally, these formulas imply that,
holding discount rates and payout ratios constant, we can directly calculate
differences in expected growth rates based on differences in C/P or E/P ra-
tios. Because the assumptions behind these simple formulas are restrictive
(e.g., constant growth rates, strict proportionality of dividends, cash flows
and earnings, identical payout ratios across stocks, etc.), we do not calcu-
late exact estimates of differences in expected growth rates between value
and glamour portfolios. Instead, we choose to analyze differences in past
growth, valuation multiples and future growth rates in a way that is more
robust with respect to departures from these assumptions. However, the
idea behind this analysis is the same. We ask whether the large differences
in C/P and E/P ratios between value and glamour stocks can be justified by
differences in future growth rates.
We start with the data for portfolios classified according to (C/P, GS). As
we know already, the past growth of glamour stocks by any measure was
much faster than that of value stocks. For example, over the five years before


Table 8.5 (cont.)

Panel C: Future Performance

AEG(0,5) 0.050 0.436 0.089 0.086
ACG(0,5) 0.127 0.070 0.112 0.052
ASG(0,5) 0.062 0.020 0.100 0.037
AEG(2,5) 0.070 0.215 0.084 0.147
ACG(2,5) 0.086 0.111 0.095 0.088
ASG(2,5) 0.059 0.023 0.082 0.038

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