Score contribution per author:
α: calibrated so average coauthorship-adjusted count equals average raw count
It has been found that the consumption‐wealth ratio (cay) constructed from revised data is a strong predictor of stock market returns. This paper shows that its out‐of‐sample forecasting power becomes substantially weaker if cay is estimated using information available at the time of forecast. The difference, which mainly reflects periodic revisions in consumption and labor income data, is consistent with the conjecture that cay is a theoretically motivated variable. That is, revised data outperform real‐time data because the former have smaller measurement errors. Nevertheless, practitioners should be cautious when they need to use real‐time cay as a forecasting variable. (JEL G10, G14)