International audienceWhen stocks are trading near their 52-week high investors tend to have low expectation about their future returns. We contrast such expectations against firms' fundamental strength. For firms with strong fundamentals, we confirm that investors' expectations are too low, which is consistent with the hypothesis that the 52-week high acts as a psychological anchor. We report that a fundamental-strength enhanced 52-week high trading strategy significantly outperform the unconditional strategy by nearly doubling its average return. Moreover, we provide interesting evidence that this anomalous effect is most evident when investor sentiment is high, but absent among more sophisticated institutions and short sellers
The academic literature on finance has since the mid 60’s been largely influenced by the Efficient M...
We provide a new perspective on option and stock price behavior around 52-week highs and lows. We an...
In this study, we use several indices to empirically test the two proxies proposed by Li and Yu (201...
In a landmark paper, George and Hwang (2004) show that a stock's 52-week high price largely explains...
Existing research shows that a strategy based on the 52-week high prices of individual stocks explai...
The present study explores the effect of anchoring on stock trading volumes. I hypothesize that if o...
The phenomenon that stocks with relatively high (low) returns in recent months continue to exhibit r...
The behavioural finance literature expects systematic and significant deviations from efficiency to ...
Using Oslo Stock Exchange market data from 1991 to 2010, a portfolio based on the current price's ne...
We investigate the joint ability of fundamental-based and market-based news to explain the anomalous...
We provide new empirical evidence on the profitability of two different 52-week high momentum strat...
Motivated by both statistical and psychological evidence on underreaction and over-reaction, we prop...
Profitability and investment are becoming the new focus of empirical asset pricing. We examine the e...
We find that insiders adopt dissimulation strategies to conceal their informational advantage and tr...
This paper examines the effect of heterogeneous beliefs and short-sell constraints on the long-run p...
The academic literature on finance has since the mid 60’s been largely influenced by the Efficient M...
We provide a new perspective on option and stock price behavior around 52-week highs and lows. We an...
In this study, we use several indices to empirically test the two proxies proposed by Li and Yu (201...
In a landmark paper, George and Hwang (2004) show that a stock's 52-week high price largely explains...
Existing research shows that a strategy based on the 52-week high prices of individual stocks explai...
The present study explores the effect of anchoring on stock trading volumes. I hypothesize that if o...
The phenomenon that stocks with relatively high (low) returns in recent months continue to exhibit r...
The behavioural finance literature expects systematic and significant deviations from efficiency to ...
Using Oslo Stock Exchange market data from 1991 to 2010, a portfolio based on the current price's ne...
We investigate the joint ability of fundamental-based and market-based news to explain the anomalous...
We provide new empirical evidence on the profitability of two different 52-week high momentum strat...
Motivated by both statistical and psychological evidence on underreaction and over-reaction, we prop...
Profitability and investment are becoming the new focus of empirical asset pricing. We examine the e...
We find that insiders adopt dissimulation strategies to conceal their informational advantage and tr...
This paper examines the effect of heterogeneous beliefs and short-sell constraints on the long-run p...
The academic literature on finance has since the mid 60’s been largely influenced by the Efficient M...
We provide a new perspective on option and stock price behavior around 52-week highs and lows. We an...
In this study, we use several indices to empirically test the two proxies proposed by Li and Yu (201...