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1 – 10 of 26Thomas H. McInish, Alex Frino and Frank Sensenbrenner
Using data for actual insider trading cases prosecuted by the Securities and Exchange Commission, the paper aims to investigate whether insiders trade strategically to avoid…
Abstract
Purpose
Using data for actual insider trading cases prosecuted by the Securities and Exchange Commission, the paper aims to investigate whether insiders trade strategically to avoid detection.
Design/methodology/approach
The paper analyzes actual insider trades prior to price sensitive announcements.
Findings
It is found that insiders are more likely to trade on high volume days, which indicates an effort to hide their trades. Further, insider trading raises the number of days with abnormally high trading volume only slightly, again indicating that insiders are avoiding attracting attention. No evidence is found that insider trading intensity increases on the insider trading day closest to the announcement day. The hypothesis that index returns for insider trading days and non‐trading days are the same cannot be rejected, which is consistent with insiders avoiding detection. For stocks sold by insiders, returns are higher for insider trading days than for non‐insider trading days. Hence, insiders are selling on days when the market is up, which tends to hide their trading. But for stocks bought by insiders, returns are significantly higher on insider trading days than on non‐insider‐trading days, indicating that in this case insiders may attract unwanted attention.
Originality/value
The research may be useful to those attempting to detect insider trades.
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Michael Aitken, Frederick H. deB., Thomas H. McInish and Kathryn Wong
The purpose of this paper is to investigate the cross‐sectional determinants of the role of the underwriter in aftermarket price discovery.
Abstract
Purpose
The purpose of this paper is to investigate the cross‐sectional determinants of the role of the underwriter in aftermarket price discovery.
Design/methodology/approach
The paper estimates Gonzalo‐Granger common factor weights across underwriter and non‐underwriter execution channels in the IPO aftermarket and investigates the cross‐sectional determinants of these CFWs.
Findings
The first novel result is that verifiable facts are not a substitute for, but a complement to, underwriter certification and advice. Specifically, the underwriter's contribution to price discovery increases with the number of supplier and customer contracts reported in the prospectus. Second, the underwriter's role in price discovery declines when the IPO is first in a new technology or product space. These findings indicate that the verification process, not de novo information production, is the key function of the underwriter.
Research limitations/implications
Research design is applicable to IPOs in the USA and elsewhere.
Originality/value
Previous research examining IPO aftermarket trading has been largely limited to the first day of trading. The paper contributes to the small but growing literature that examines the role of the underwriter beyond this period.
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EDWARD A. DYL, H. DOUGLAS WITTE and LARRY R. GORMAN
We examine tick sizes, stock prices, and share turnover in eighteen stock markets in developed countries and find that differences in mandatory tick sizes explain a significant…
Abstract
We examine tick sizes, stock prices, and share turnover in eighteen stock markets in developed countries and find that differences in mandatory tick sizes explain a significant proportion of the variation in stock prices among markets, and that lower percentage tick sizes are not associated with higher turnover. We consider the implications of these findings for the recent decimalization of stock trading in the United States, and conclude that decimal trading is likely to result in lower stock prices (due to stock splits) with no substantial change in dollar trading volume.
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Raghbendra Jha and Hari K. Nagarajan
This paper examines market structure and efficiency of price transmittals in the two national stock exchanges of India: The Bombay Stock Exchange and the National Stock Exchange…
Abstract
This paper examines market structure and efficiency of price transmittals in the two national stock exchanges of India: The Bombay Stock Exchange and the National Stock Exchange. Price movements in a large number of important stocks in both markets are considered. The framework used is the Johansen‐Juselius multivariate cointegration technique. It is discovered that price movements within each market are cointegrated. Short‐run ECM analysis shows that no stock in any market is exogenous, thus indicating that there is considerable feedback in short‐run price movements from each stock. Some short‐run price movements are stabilizing. The Bombay Stock Exchange and National Stock Exchange appear to be reasonably efficient markets.
Michael Bleaney and Zhiyong Li
This paper aims to investigate the performance of estimators of the bid-ask spread in a wide range of circumstances and sampling frequencies. The bid-ask spread is important for…
Abstract
Purpose
This paper aims to investigate the performance of estimators of the bid-ask spread in a wide range of circumstances and sampling frequencies. The bid-ask spread is important for many reasons. Because spread data are not always available, many methods have been suggested for estimating the spread. Existing papers focus on the performance of the estimators either under ideal conditions or in real data. The gap between ideal conditions and the properties of real data are usually ignored. The consistency of the estimates across various sampling frequencies is also ignored.
Design/methodology/approach
The estimators and the possible errors are analysed theoretically. Then we perform simulation experiments, reporting the bias, standard deviation and root mean square estimation error of each estimator. More specifically, we assess the effects of the following factors on the performance of the estimators: the magnitude of the spread relative to returns volatility, randomly varying of spreads, the autocorrelation of mid-price returns and mid-price changes caused by trade directions and feedback trading.
Findings
The best estimates come from using the highest frequency of data available. The relative performance of estimators can vary quite markedly with the sampling frequency. In small samples, the standard deviation can be more important to the estimation error than bias; in large samples, the opposite tends to be true.
Originality/value
There is a conspicuous lack of simulation evidence on the comparative performance of different estimators of the spread under the less than ideal conditions that are typical of real-world data. This paper aims to fill this gap.
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Samra Chaudary, Sohail Zafar and Thomas Li-Ping Tang
Following behavioral finance and monetary wisdom, the authors theorize: Decision-makers (investors) adopt deep-rooted personal values (the love-of-money attitudes/avaricious…
Abstract
Purpose
Following behavioral finance and monetary wisdom, the authors theorize: Decision-makers (investors) adopt deep-rooted personal values (the love-of-money attitudes/avaricious financial aspirations) as a lens to frame critical concerns (short-term and long-term investment decisions) in the immediate-proximal (current income) and distal-omnibus (future inheritance) contexts to maximize expected utility and ultimate serenity across context, people and time.
Design/methodology/approach
The authors collected data from 277 active equity traders (professional money managers and individual investors) in Pakistan’s two most robust investment hubs—Karachi and Lahore. The authors measured their love-of-money attitude (avaricious monetary aspirations), short-term and long-term investment decisions and demographic variables and collected data during Pakistan's bear markets (Pakistan Stock Exchange, PSX-100).
Findings
Investors’ love of money relates to short-term and long-term decisions. However, these relationships are significant for money managers but non-significant for individual investors. Further, investors’ current income moderates this relationship for short-term investment decisions but not long-term decisions. The intensity of the aspirations-to-short-term investment relationship is much higher for investors with low-income levels than those with average and high-income levels. Future inheritance moderates the relationships between aspirations and short-term and long-term decisions. Regardless of their love-of-money orientations, investors with future inheritance have higher magnitudes of short-term and long-term investments than those without future inheritance. The intensity of the aspirations-to-investments relationship is more potent for investors without future inheritance than those with inheritance. Investors with low avaricious monetary aspirations and without inheritance expectations show the lowest short-term and long-term investment decisions. Investors' current income and future inheritance moderate the relationships between their love of money attitude and short-term and long-term decisions differently in Pakistan's bear markets.
Practical implications
The authors help investors make financial decisions and help financial institutions, asset management companies, brokerage houses and investment banks identify marketing strategies and investor segmentation and provide individualized services.
Originality/value
Professional money managers have a stronger short-term orientation than individual investors. Lack of wealth (current income and future inheritance) motivates greedy investors to take more risks and become more vulnerable than non-greedy ones—investors’ financial resources and wealth matter. The Matthew Effect in investment decisions exists in Pakistan’s emerging economy.
Details
Keywords
- Behavioural finance/economics/prospect theory/risk-taking/aversion
- Planned behaviour/TPB
- Values
- Love of money/money/greed/power/achievement/obsession/budget
- Current/income/future/inheritance/time/gender
- Short-term/Long-term/Decision-making
- Conservation/resource/wealth/possession/stress
- Bull/Bear/Market
- Pakistan Stock Exchange (PSX-100)
Donald R. Fraser, John C. Groth and Steven S. Byers
This paper examines and updates an earlier study of the liquidity of an extensive array of common stocks traded on NYSE/ASE/NML‐NASDAQ. It reports apparent variances in liquidity…
Abstract
This paper examines and updates an earlier study of the liquidity of an extensive array of common stocks traded on NYSE/ASE/NML‐NASDAQ. It reports apparent variances in liquidity due to trading location and other variables. The paper suggests causes for these differences.
Julia Henker, Thomas Henker and Anna Mitsios
The purpose of this research is to consider whether market wide herding occurs intraday.
Abstract
Purpose
The purpose of this research is to consider whether market wide herding occurs intraday.
Design/methodology/approach
Using the 1995 Christie and Huang and the 2000 Chang et al. models, the paper tests whether market wide and industry sector herding occurs intraday in the Australian equities market.
Findings
Neither market wide nor industry sector herding occurs intraday.
Research limitations/implications
Both herding measures focus on one specific type of herding, herding evidenced by changes in the cross‐sectional return distribution. Therefore the herding measures are ill suited to capture the effects of period specific abnormally high or low market returns and they can also capture herding of market participants or groups of market participants only in as far as it manifests itself in security specific returns.
Originality/value
No previous studies have considered the possibility of intraday herding in equities markets. Even if there is little evidence of herding over longer time periods, market frictions and inefficiencies continue to be exploited at least anecdotally by traders with very short time horizons to the detriment of longer term investors.
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The study attempts to assess the relationship between sociodemographic factors and the risk tolerance level of stock market investors reflected by their trading behavior from the…
Abstract
Purpose
The study attempts to assess the relationship between sociodemographic factors and the risk tolerance level of stock market investors reflected by their trading behavior from the perspective of developing market economy.
Design/methodology/approach
The study collected data from a survey on capital market investors in Bangladesh. Portfolio beta has been used as a dependent variable to measure the risk tolerance level where total 11 sociodemographic factors have been used as independent variables.
Findings
Among all study variables, three sociodemographic factors are found to be significant in differentiating the risk tolerance level of the stock market investors. The author finds that the risk tolerance level of stock market investors significantly varies according to marital status, family size and financial responsibility.
Practical implications
As sociodemographic characteristics provide a basis in assessing the investor risk tolerance level in the context of developing market economies, the study suggests that stock market related policy and investment management planning process should be formulated by incorporating behavioral aspects of the retail investors.
Originality/value
This study has the potential to contribute to the behavioral finance literature by showing how and at what extent sociodemographic factors may influence the risk tolerance level of stock market investors in developing countries, where sociodemographic factors are considered to be more dominating than the normative portfolio selection procedure because of lacking in investors' financial literacy and due to the presence of a weak regulatory as well as institutional framework. Further, apart from identifying and comprehensively incorporating all possible sociodemographic factors, this study uses portfolio beta as a new objective measure for financial risk tolerance, which overcomes the problem of subjective and other risk tolerance measurement in the existing literature.
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Abdulrazzak Charbaji and Souad E.L. Jannoun
To address the issue of risk intention using personal e‐cards and to test the effect of the individuality of decision makers in the Lebanese context.
Abstract
Purpose
To address the issue of risk intention using personal e‐cards and to test the effect of the individuality of decision makers in the Lebanese context.
Design/methodology/approach
The data of this research were collected by means of personal interviews using questionnaire. The sample involved 197 managers from various industries. The researchers developed a discriminant function equation to investigate risk taking behavior in the use of e‐cards. The function classifies individuals into risk takers and non‐risk takers on the basis of their psychographics and demographic characteristics. Risk was measured using the risk‐assessment scenario developed by MacCrimmon and Wehrung. Risk intention was measured by asking: “What is the likelihood of your being willing, in the near future, to pay for items on the internet using a personal e‐card?”. Seven items were used to measure psychographics and lifestyle information. Factor analysis was used as a data‐reduction technique, followed by multiple regression analysis (discriminant function) to determine the relative importance of the independent variables.
Findings
The study demonstrated that, although respondents valued risk and were willing to take a chance, they did care about security. Further analysis showed that highly educated managers (university education) and Christians were slightly more willing to pay by e‐card on the internet than were less‐educated and Muslim managers.
Research limitations/implications
It has to be borne in mind that using dissimilar groups will make the validity of the procedure questionable. Replicating the same study under different conditions (different groups in Lebanon or outside Lebanon) will make prediction more reliable.
Practical implications
The discriminant analysis in this study has helped to explain the difference between risk taking and non‐risk‐taking managers in Lebanon.
Originality/value
This paper addresses a new issue about risk intention and offers practical explanation. It fulfils an identified need in the Literature. Lebanon is a small country with one of the most developed internet markets in the Arab world but Lebanese People hesitate to transfer money via the internet. The current study was therefore conducted to address the issue of risk intention using personal e‐cards and to test the effect of the individuality of decisionmakers in the Lebanese context.
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