6 research outputs found

    Collaborative Speculation and Overvaluation: Evidence from Social Media

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    I use data from StockTwits and Twitter to provide evidence that investor attention on social media in the period before earnings is related to short-term overvaluation, consistent with bullish investors herding around common information. In the 2 to 60 days after earnings, returns for companies in the highest quintile of pre-earnings announcement investor attention are 4.2 percent lower than those of companies in the lowest quintile. I find evidence that the negative post-earnings drift result found in this study is related to investors waiting until after earnings are announced to enact costly arbitrage strategies. I further examine intra- and inter-network herding and find evidence that social media influences investors beyond the population of active users. This study contributes to prior literature on herding, social media, and speculation and arbitrage

    Simmons-Smith Cyclopropanation Reaction

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    More than one thousand references related to soil water repellency

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    References

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    A second update on mapping the human genetic architecture of COVID-19

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