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We examine whether commonality in liquidity arises from style investing. We sort stocks into styles along widely-used size and growth dimensions, and show that style-related commonality in liquidity is significant, dominates commonality in liquidity with the rest of the market, and has more than...
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This paper sheds empirical light on whether sentiment affects the profitability of price momentum strategies. We hypothesize that news that contradicts investors' sentiment causes cognitive dissonance, which slows the diffusion of signals that oppose the direction of sentiment. This phenomenon...
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The propensity of households to invest in stocks is lower than implied by Expected Utility Theory. One explanation suggested in the literature is that stocks entail ambiguity and investors are ambiguity averse. We test this hypothesis, measuring participation using equity fund flows and...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10012905424
We use responses to a self-report survey and matched trading data to investigate the effects of personality (Big Five traits), IQ and financial literacy on individuals’ stock trading portfolios. Traits have small but significant effects: openness and extraversion are associated with...
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