We examine whether the trading activities of retail and institutional investors cause comovements in stock returns. Around stock splits, retail trading correlations (RTCs) decrease with stocks in the presplit price range and increase with stocks in the post-split price range. These shifts in RTCs induce changes in return comovements. In the cross section, return comovements among low-priced stocks are amplified when retail trades are more correlated and when aggregate uncertainty amplifies behavioral biases. We find similar patterns among local stocks and when firms change their corporate headquarters. In contrast to retail trading, institutional trading attenuates return comovements
We examine the short-run dynamic relation between daily institutional trading and stock price volati...
This dissertation provides empirical evidence that investor trades unrelated to cash-flow fundamenta...
Although a cornerstone of traditional finance theory, empirical evidence in support of a positive me...
Using a database of more than 1.85 million retail investor transactions over 1991-1996, we show that...
This paper examines how the trading activities of different investor types are related to common ret...
This paper investigates whether investor sentiment can explain stock return comovements. Our finding...
We measure the relative sentiment of retail versus institutional investors by comparing their respec...
We study the trading of individual investors using transaction data and identifying buyer- or seller...
This paper investigates the interactions between changes in share ownership structure and equity ret...
A number of studies have identifed patterns of positive correlation of returns, or comovement, among...
Abstract: We examine the trades of individual and professional investors around stock splits and fin...
Investor bias in favor of geographically close firms has been documented in previous papers. An impl...
We study the daily and intradaily cross-sectional relation between stock re-turns and the trading of...
We study whether institutional investors ’ trading activity causes the liquidity of broad groups of ...
Traditional finance theory posits a positive risk–return relation, but empirical evidence is inconcl...
We examine the short-run dynamic relation between daily institutional trading and stock price volati...
This dissertation provides empirical evidence that investor trades unrelated to cash-flow fundamenta...
Although a cornerstone of traditional finance theory, empirical evidence in support of a positive me...
Using a database of more than 1.85 million retail investor transactions over 1991-1996, we show that...
This paper examines how the trading activities of different investor types are related to common ret...
This paper investigates whether investor sentiment can explain stock return comovements. Our finding...
We measure the relative sentiment of retail versus institutional investors by comparing their respec...
We study the trading of individual investors using transaction data and identifying buyer- or seller...
This paper investigates the interactions between changes in share ownership structure and equity ret...
A number of studies have identifed patterns of positive correlation of returns, or comovement, among...
Abstract: We examine the trades of individual and professional investors around stock splits and fin...
Investor bias in favor of geographically close firms has been documented in previous papers. An impl...
We study the daily and intradaily cross-sectional relation between stock re-turns and the trading of...
We study whether institutional investors ’ trading activity causes the liquidity of broad groups of ...
Traditional finance theory posits a positive risk–return relation, but empirical evidence is inconcl...
We examine the short-run dynamic relation between daily institutional trading and stock price volati...
This dissertation provides empirical evidence that investor trades unrelated to cash-flow fundamenta...
Although a cornerstone of traditional finance theory, empirical evidence in support of a positive me...