Motivated by existing evidence of a preference among investors for assets with lottery-like payoffs and that many investors are poorly diversified, we investigate the significance of extreme positive returns in the cross-sectional pricing of stocks. Portfolio-level analyses and firm-level cross-sectional regressions indicate a negative and significant relation between the maximum daily return over the past one month(MAX) and expected stock returns. Average raw and risk-adjusted return differences between stocks in the lowest and highest MAX deciles exceed 1% per month. These results are robust to controls for size, book-to-market, momentum, short-term reversals, liquidity, and skewness. Of particular interest, including MAX generally subsum...
The literature has demonstrated that stocks with skewness-like haracteristics – lotteryness– are the...
This paper develops a new measure of return asymmetry, following Patil et al. (2012). We demonstrate...
Abstract We investigate the significance of extreme positive returns in the cross-sectional pricing ...
Motivated by existing evidence of a preference among investors for assets with lottery-like payoffs ...
Motivated by existing evidence of a preference among investors for assets with lottery-like payoffs ...
Motivated by existing evidence of a preference among investors for assets with lottery-like payoffs ...
This thesis revisits the evidence recently found on the negative influence of extreme positive daily...
We find a robust negative relation between skewness/lottery-like features, proxied by maximum return...
We form indexes of overpriced and underpriced stocks by ranking stocks based on the disposition effe...
This study examines the significance of extreme positive returns measured by maximum daily returns i...
Thesis (S.M.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Sloan School of Management, Operations Researc...
AbstractWe document a reliable positive relation between excess volatility and the cross-section of ...
We investigate the significance of extreme positive returns (MAX) in the cross-sectional pricing of ...
We test the cross-sectional relation between daily maximum return (MAX) and return in the following ...
AbstractResearch does not indicate a consensus on the relationship between idiosyncratic volatility ...
The literature has demonstrated that stocks with skewness-like haracteristics – lotteryness– are the...
This paper develops a new measure of return asymmetry, following Patil et al. (2012). We demonstrate...
Abstract We investigate the significance of extreme positive returns in the cross-sectional pricing ...
Motivated by existing evidence of a preference among investors for assets with lottery-like payoffs ...
Motivated by existing evidence of a preference among investors for assets with lottery-like payoffs ...
Motivated by existing evidence of a preference among investors for assets with lottery-like payoffs ...
This thesis revisits the evidence recently found on the negative influence of extreme positive daily...
We find a robust negative relation between skewness/lottery-like features, proxied by maximum return...
We form indexes of overpriced and underpriced stocks by ranking stocks based on the disposition effe...
This study examines the significance of extreme positive returns measured by maximum daily returns i...
Thesis (S.M.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Sloan School of Management, Operations Researc...
AbstractWe document a reliable positive relation between excess volatility and the cross-section of ...
We investigate the significance of extreme positive returns (MAX) in the cross-sectional pricing of ...
We test the cross-sectional relation between daily maximum return (MAX) and return in the following ...
AbstractResearch does not indicate a consensus on the relationship between idiosyncratic volatility ...
The literature has demonstrated that stocks with skewness-like haracteristics – lotteryness– are the...
This paper develops a new measure of return asymmetry, following Patil et al. (2012). We demonstrate...
Abstract We investigate the significance of extreme positive returns in the cross-sectional pricing ...