Residual income valuation models and inflation
Wang, Pengguo; Ashton, David; Peasnell, Ken
Date: 25 June 2010
Journal
European Accounting Review
Publisher
Routledge/Taylor & Francis
Publisher DOI
Abstract
Existing empirical evidence suggests that residual income valuation models based on
historical cost accounting considerably underestimate equity values. One possible
explanation is the use of historical cost accounting under inflationary conditions. In
this paper, we use a residual income framework to explore theoretically how ...
Existing empirical evidence suggests that residual income valuation models based on
historical cost accounting considerably underestimate equity values. One possible
explanation is the use of historical cost accounting under inflationary conditions. In
this paper, we use a residual income framework to explore theoretically how historical
cost accounting numbers need to be adjusted for inflation in forecasting and valuation.
We demonstrate that even in a simple setting where inflation is running at a relatively
low level, residual income models are likely to produce severe under-valuations if
inflation is not properly taken into account. We use simulated data to reinforce our
theoretical findings and to illustrate the difficulties that empirical investigators face
working within the confines imposed by real data.
Finance and Accounting
Faculty of Environment, Science and Economy
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