Hard-to-Value Stocks, Behavioral Biases, and Informed Trading
This paper uses investor-level data to provide direct evidence for an intuitive but surprisingly untested proposition that investors make larger investment mistakes when valuation uncertainty is higher and stocks are more difficult to value. Using multiple measures of valuation uncertainty and multiple behavioral bias proxies, I show that individual investors exhibit stronger behavioral biases when stocks are harder to value and when market-level uncertainty is higher. I also find that informed trading intensity is higher among stocks where individual investors exhibit stronger behavioral biases. Collectively, these results indicate that uncertainty at both stock and market levels amplifies individual investors’ behavioral biases and that relatively better informed investors attempt to exploit those biases.
Year of publication: |
2009
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Authors: | Kumar, Alok |
Published in: |
Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis. - Cambridge University Press. - Vol. 44.2009, 06, p. 1375-1401
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Publisher: |
Cambridge University Press |
Description of contents: | Abstract [journals.cambridge.org] |
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