This paper examines the presence of day-of-the-week and month-of-the-year effects in the Australian stock market over the past several decades, and investigates whether long-standing anomalies persist following the 1987 stock market crash, and the 2008 global financial crisis. We find that before the 1987 crash the Australian stock market recorded lowest returns on Tuesday and highest returns on Thursdays. However, these daily phenomena seemed to vanish in the decades since, suggesting that Australian daily share prices are more likely to move randomly. In contrast, monthly seasonality is still in place with negative returns recorded in May and June, and high returns in July, December, and April. Seasonality and predictability in Australian...
This article provides further insights into the properties of momentum trading strategies using info...
The study investigates the existence of seasonal anomaly by testing four calendar anomalies; day-of-...
This study examines the daily anomalies in the five ASEAN equity markets of Malaysia, Singapore, Tha...
We studied monthly seasonality in the top 50 Australian stocks across different industry sectors. Un...
We examine seasonal anomalies in Johannesburg daily stock returns from January 1973 to September 201...
Griffith Business School, Department of Accounting, Finance and EconomicsFull Tex
A number of studies exist across a range of equity markets showing that a significant proportion of ...
In this paper, we study day-of-the-week effects in the top 50 Australian companies across different ...
The 'conventional wisdom' about efficient markets is that there are little excess returns, relative ...
This thesis investigates the Day-of-the-week, Month-of-the-year and Quarter-of-the-year effects. His...
This thesis investigates the Day-of-the-week, Month-of-the-year and Quarter-of-the-year effects. His...
The 'conventional wisdom' about efficient markets is that there are little excess returns, relative ...
This thesis investigates the Day-of-the-week, Month-of-the-year and Quarter-of-the-year effects. His...
On the basis of raw return analysis, economically significant anomalies appear to exist in relation ...
On the basis of raw return analysis, economically significant anomalies appear to exist in relation ...
This article provides further insights into the properties of momentum trading strategies using info...
The study investigates the existence of seasonal anomaly by testing four calendar anomalies; day-of-...
This study examines the daily anomalies in the five ASEAN equity markets of Malaysia, Singapore, Tha...
We studied monthly seasonality in the top 50 Australian stocks across different industry sectors. Un...
We examine seasonal anomalies in Johannesburg daily stock returns from January 1973 to September 201...
Griffith Business School, Department of Accounting, Finance and EconomicsFull Tex
A number of studies exist across a range of equity markets showing that a significant proportion of ...
In this paper, we study day-of-the-week effects in the top 50 Australian companies across different ...
The 'conventional wisdom' about efficient markets is that there are little excess returns, relative ...
This thesis investigates the Day-of-the-week, Month-of-the-year and Quarter-of-the-year effects. His...
This thesis investigates the Day-of-the-week, Month-of-the-year and Quarter-of-the-year effects. His...
The 'conventional wisdom' about efficient markets is that there are little excess returns, relative ...
This thesis investigates the Day-of-the-week, Month-of-the-year and Quarter-of-the-year effects. His...
On the basis of raw return analysis, economically significant anomalies appear to exist in relation ...
On the basis of raw return analysis, economically significant anomalies appear to exist in relation ...
This article provides further insights into the properties of momentum trading strategies using info...
The study investigates the existence of seasonal anomaly by testing four calendar anomalies; day-of-...
This study examines the daily anomalies in the five ASEAN equity markets of Malaysia, Singapore, Tha...