4,824 research outputs found

    Retail investor recognition and the cross section of stock returns

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    Academic Paper Sessions: Session 151 ā€“ The Cross-Section of Returns: Cash, Investor Recognition, and Idiosyncratic VolatilityWe test and offer support to Mertonā€™s (1987) theory that difference in a stockā€™s investor recognition affects its cost of capital. In the U.S. market, using the breadth of ownership among retail investors as a proxy for investor recognition, we show that a long-short portfolio based on the annual change of shareholder base earns a compounded annual abnormal return of 6.42% after controlling for the Fama-French three factors. These results are more pronounced among young, low visibility and high idiosyncratic volatility stocks, and are robust to various controls such as momentum, breadth of institutional ownership, analyst coverage, liquidity, idiosyncratic volatility, trading volume, accruals, capital investment, probability of informed trading (PIN), and retail investor sentiment. Moreover, we present evidence that the investor recognition effect can explain approximately 20% of the net equity issuance effect documented by Pontiff and Woodgate (2008).postprintThe 2010 Annual Meeting of the Financial Management Association (FMA), New York, N.Y., 20-23 October 2010

    Cross-hedging with currency options and futures

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    This paper develops an expected utility model of a multinational firm facing exchange rate risk exposure to a foreign currency cash flow. Currency derivative markets do not exist between the domestic and foreign currencies. There are, however, currency futures and options markets between the domestic currency and a third currency to which the firm has access. Since a triangular parity condition holds among these three currencies, the available, yet incomplete, currency futures and options markets still provide a useful avenue for the firm to indirectly hedge against its foreign exchange risk exposure. This paper offers analytical insights into the optimal cross-hedging strategies of the firm. In particular, the results show the optimality of using options in conjunction with futures in the case of currency mismatching, even though cash flows appear to be linear.published_or_final_versio

    Less is more when analysts report bad news

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    Session 166: Sell-Side AnalystsTop Ten SessionThis study documents the existence of a positive-negative asymmetry in analystsā€™ consensus earnings forecast revisions. We find that upward revisions are more informative than downward revisions. After controlling for momentum, extreme downward revisions contain little incremental information compared with moderate downward revisions. The differential richness of information set in good and bad news revisions is more pronounced among bigger, more heavily covered stocks and stocks with higher institutional holding, i.e. stocks typically are more prone to the analyst agency problem. These findings are consistent with the claim that analysts systematically struggle with bad news reporting as conflicts are exacerbated with bad news but are attenuated with good news.postprin

    Expected stock returns and the conditional skewness

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    Motivated by the parsimonious jump-diĀ®usion model of Zhang, Zhao and Chang (2010), we show that the aggregate market returns can be predicted by the conditional skewness of returns and the variance risk premium, a diĀ®erence between the physical and risk-neutral variance of market returns, even though the variance is supposed to be constant only if jump exists. The magnitude of the predictability is particularly striking at the intermediate quarterly return horizon, even combing other predictor variables, like P/D ratio, the default spread and the consumption-wealth ratio (CAY). We also ĀÆnd that the third central moments are signiĀÆcant in explaining the variance risk premium, which further implies that the potential link between the variance risk premium and the excess market return is the third central moments, not the skewness.postprintThe 2011 China International Conference in Finance, Wuhan, China, 4-7 July 2011.2011äø­å›½é‡‘čžå›½é™…å¹“会, äø­å›½, ꭦ걉, 2011幓7꜈4ę—„č‡³7ę—„

    Equilibrium asset and option pricing under jump diffusion

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    This paper develops an equilibrium asset and option pricing model in a production economy under jump diiffusion. The model provides analytical formulas for an equity premium and a more general pricing kernel that links the physical and risk-neutral densities. The model explains the two empirical phenomena of the negative variance risk premium and implied volatility smirk if market crashes are expected. Model estimation with the S&P 500 index from 1985 to 2005 shows that jump size is indeed negative and the risk aversion coeĀ±cient has a reasonable value when taking the jump into account. This is a joint work with Huimin Zhao and Eric C. Chang.postprin

    Suitability Checks and Household Investments in Structured Products

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    The suitability of complex financial products for household investors is an important issue in light of consumer financial protection. The U.S. Dodd-Frank Act, for instance, mandates that distributors check suitability when selling structured products to retail investors. However, little empirical evidence exists on such transactions. Using data from Hong Kong, we find that investors purchase 8% more structured products, on average, when the suitability is not checked. The effect of suitability checks is more pronounced for less financially literate investors. Moreover, investors tend to buy products with lower risk-adjusted returns when product suitability is not checked.postprin

    Household investments in structured financial products: pulled or pushed?

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    Session 175 - Crisis: Individual InvestorsStructured financial products including credit-linked notes and collateralized debt obligations were popular before the credit crisis but then delivered substantial loss to investors. Driver for investment decision in those products is key to understanding the fundamental causes of the crisis. Classical portfolio theory suggests that investors would shun away from unfamiliar financial products. This familiarity bias holds especially for unsophisticated household investors. The rapid growth of structured products market, the newest financial innovations, presents an opportune setting to test such conventional wisdoms. Using unique household investment data from Hong Kong, we show that product distributors' selling intensity is an important determinant for investors' allocation in structured products. On the other hand, more financially literate investors, who are more capable of optimizing asset allocation, include less structured products into their portfolios. Important determinants according to mean-variance analysis, such as product premium, have little explanatory power to investor's allocation decisions. Our finding suggests that investments in structured products prior to the credit crisis were more likely to be pulled by distributors. This paper demonstrates the importance of financial literacy for investment decisions.postprintThe 2010 Annual Meeting of the Financial Management Association (FMA), New York, N.Y., 20-23 October 2010

    Governance through trading: does institutional trading discipline empire building and earnings management?

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    Accounting Session 1: Earnings ManagementThe Conference program's website is located at http://areas.kenan-flagler.unc.edu/conferences/2013cfea/Pages/Final%20Schedule.aspxThis paper empirically identifies an important external corporate governance mechanism through which the institutional trading improves firm values and disciplines managers from conducting value-destroying activities. We propose a reward-punishment intensity (RPI) measure, and show that it is positively related to firmā€™s subsequent Tobinā€™s Q. Importantly, we find that firms with higher RPI exhibit less subsequent empire building and earnings management. Furthermore, we show that the exogenous liquidity shock of Decimalization augments the governance effect of institutional trading. We also find that the discipline effect is more pronounced for firms with moderate institutional ownership concentration, higher managersā€™ wealth-performance sensitivity, and higher trading liquidity, which further supports the governance role of the RPI. The results are robust to using a subsample containing firms with reduced institutional ownership and to using two instrumental variables.postprin
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