Evidence of excessive comovement among stocks following index additions (Barberis, Shleifer, and Wurgler, 2005) and stock splits (Green and Hwang, 2009) challenges traditional finance theory. We show that the bivariate regressions in this literature provide little information about the economic magnitude of excess comovement, with coefficients that are sensitive to unrelated factors. Using robust univariate regressions and matched control samples, almost all evidence of excess comovement disappears. In both examples, the stocks exhibit strong returns prior to the event, akin to momentum winners. We document that winner stocks exhibit increases in betas, generating much of the apparent excess comovement
We employ the Barberis, Shleifer and Wurgler (2004) methodology to investigate the impact of changes...
We find, unlike earlier studies, that there is no rise in the market betas of stocks that enter the ...
We show that comovements of individual stock prices cannot be justified by economic fundamentals. Th...
Recent evidence of excessive comovement among stocks following index additions (Barberis, Shleifer, ...
Relative to their weights in a value-weighted index, a number of stocks in Japan’s Nikkei 225 stock ...
A number of studies have identifed patterns of positive correlation of returns, or comovement, among...
Many studies have documented stock return comovement above and beyond that predicted by standard ass...
We present the first comprehensive study of excess comovement in the Norwegian stock market, and fin...
We investigate sources and implications of excess comovement in stock returns. Using an as-set prici...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2015The study of the comovement between asset returns refl...
We reinvestigate the issue of excess comovements of commodity prices initially raised in Pindyck an...
This paper is focused on two phenomenons that is called excess comovement and financial contagion. T...
We connect stocks through their common active mutual fund owners. We show that the degree of shared ...
We employ the Barberis, Shleifer and Wurgler (2004) methodology to investigate the impact of changes...
This paper investigates whether investor sentiment can explain stock return comovements. Our finding...
We employ the Barberis, Shleifer and Wurgler (2004) methodology to investigate the impact of changes...
We find, unlike earlier studies, that there is no rise in the market betas of stocks that enter the ...
We show that comovements of individual stock prices cannot be justified by economic fundamentals. Th...
Recent evidence of excessive comovement among stocks following index additions (Barberis, Shleifer, ...
Relative to their weights in a value-weighted index, a number of stocks in Japan’s Nikkei 225 stock ...
A number of studies have identifed patterns of positive correlation of returns, or comovement, among...
Many studies have documented stock return comovement above and beyond that predicted by standard ass...
We present the first comprehensive study of excess comovement in the Norwegian stock market, and fin...
We investigate sources and implications of excess comovement in stock returns. Using an as-set prici...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2015The study of the comovement between asset returns refl...
We reinvestigate the issue of excess comovements of commodity prices initially raised in Pindyck an...
This paper is focused on two phenomenons that is called excess comovement and financial contagion. T...
We connect stocks through their common active mutual fund owners. We show that the degree of shared ...
We employ the Barberis, Shleifer and Wurgler (2004) methodology to investigate the impact of changes...
This paper investigates whether investor sentiment can explain stock return comovements. Our finding...
We employ the Barberis, Shleifer and Wurgler (2004) methodology to investigate the impact of changes...
We find, unlike earlier studies, that there is no rise in the market betas of stocks that enter the ...
We show that comovements of individual stock prices cannot be justified by economic fundamentals. Th...