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provides support for the noise-trading theory and the limits-to-arbitrage argument, as well as predictions from limited …
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This paper studies the dynamics of stock market volatility and retail investor attention measured by internet search queries. We find a strong co-movement of stock market indices’ realized volatility and the search queries for their names. Furthermore, Granger causality is bi-directional: high...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10009355522
This paper studies the dynamics of stock market volatility and retail investor attention measured by internet search queries. We find a strong co-movement of stock market indices' realized volatility and the search queries for their names. Furthermore, Granger causality is bi-directional: high...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10009357284
This paper studies the dynamics of stock market volatility and retail investors' attention to the stock market, where attention to the stock market is measured by internet search queries related to the leading stock market index. We find a strong co-movement of the Dow Jones' realized volatility...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10013008478
We propose an alternative Ratio Statistic for measuring predictability of stock prices. Our statistic is based on actual returns rather than logarithmic returns and is therefore better suited to capturing price predictability. It captures not only linear dependence in the same way as the...
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