This paper shows that institutional sell-side herding increased bid-ask spreads and liquidity risk during the 2007-8 financial crisis. Such an impact on liquidity is most pronounced in firms with large numbers of institutions that sold the same stocks, that is, have correlated trades. For the same reason, we find institutional investors with a dedicated, buy-and-hold, investment style to be the least likely to herd; their trading activity did not affect stock market liquidity during the crisis. Our results are robust to alternative explanations, different test specifications and consistent with recent theories highlighting the negative impact of institutional trading activity on market liquidity during a crisis
Using a supplier–client matched sample, we study the effect of the 2007–2008 financial crisis on bet...
Institutional investors such as pension funds or insurance companies commonly invest in the unsecuri...
This paper employs numerical simulations of the Park and Sabourian (2011) herd model to derive new t...
This paper shows that institutional sell-side herding increased bid-ask spreads and liquidity risk d...
We examine the impact of institutional trading on stock resiliency during the financial crisis of 20...
We study whether institutional investors ’ trading activity causes the liquidity of broad groups of ...
This dissertation aims to examine the relationship between institutional ownership and stock market ...
Using novel data on investors' bond portfolios, we study the contagion of the crisis from securitize...
This thesis consists of three stand-alone studies relating to liquidity, information, and the financ...
This paper employs numerical simulations of the Park and Sabourian (2011) herd model to derive new t...
International audienceThis paper provides new evidence on the relation between herd behavior and equ...
Available online on the publisher's website: http://www.revue-banque.fr/article/do-institutional-inv...
This paper employs a new and comprehensive data set to investigate short-term herding behavior of in...
Institutional investors such as pension funds or insurance companies commonly invest in the unsecuri...
This dissertation consists of three chapters that examine the role of institutional investors in sto...
Using a supplier–client matched sample, we study the effect of the 2007–2008 financial crisis on bet...
Institutional investors such as pension funds or insurance companies commonly invest in the unsecuri...
This paper employs numerical simulations of the Park and Sabourian (2011) herd model to derive new t...
This paper shows that institutional sell-side herding increased bid-ask spreads and liquidity risk d...
We examine the impact of institutional trading on stock resiliency during the financial crisis of 20...
We study whether institutional investors ’ trading activity causes the liquidity of broad groups of ...
This dissertation aims to examine the relationship between institutional ownership and stock market ...
Using novel data on investors' bond portfolios, we study the contagion of the crisis from securitize...
This thesis consists of three stand-alone studies relating to liquidity, information, and the financ...
This paper employs numerical simulations of the Park and Sabourian (2011) herd model to derive new t...
International audienceThis paper provides new evidence on the relation between herd behavior and equ...
Available online on the publisher's website: http://www.revue-banque.fr/article/do-institutional-inv...
This paper employs a new and comprehensive data set to investigate short-term herding behavior of in...
Institutional investors such as pension funds or insurance companies commonly invest in the unsecuri...
This dissertation consists of three chapters that examine the role of institutional investors in sto...
Using a supplier–client matched sample, we study the effect of the 2007–2008 financial crisis on bet...
Institutional investors such as pension funds or insurance companies commonly invest in the unsecuri...
This paper employs numerical simulations of the Park and Sabourian (2011) herd model to derive new t...