We show that absence of arbitrage in frictionless markets
implies a lower bound on the average of the logarithm of the
reciprocal of the stochastic discount factor implicit in
asset pricing models. The greatest lower bound
for a given asset menu is the average continuously compounded return on its
growth-optimal portfolio. We use this bound to evaluate the plausibility of
various parametric asset pricing models to characterize financial market
puzzles such as the equity premium puzzle and the risk-free rate
puzzle. We show that the insights offered by the growth-optimal bounds
differ substantially from those obtained by other
nonparametric bounds.