The effect of option trading

Abstract This paper studies the effect of option trading on corporate investment and financing policies. Based on prior literature, I hypothesize that option market induces informed trading and thus reduces information asymmetry and the cost of capital. As a result, firms with high option trading ha...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Keming Li
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2021-08-01
Series:Financial Innovation
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s40854-021-00279-5
id doaj-1c357081df564fca9bbf8d1cc57541d2
record_format Article
spelling doaj-1c357081df564fca9bbf8d1cc57541d22021-08-22T11:29:11ZengSpringerOpenFinancial Innovation2199-47302021-08-017113210.1186/s40854-021-00279-5The effect of option tradingKeming Li0Department of Accounting and Finance, A&M University-San AntonioAbstract This paper studies the effect of option trading on corporate investment and financing policies. Based on prior literature, I hypothesize that option market induces informed trading and thus reduces information asymmetry and the cost of capital. As a result, firms with high option trading have more investment and financing. Specifically, based on the United States public data, this paper finds that option trading volume increases corporate investment and financing, but reduces cash holdings and corporate payouts. These results are robust to the inclusion of industry or firm fixed effect, a control for endogenous options trading, and the use of alternative measures of option trading and corporate policies. The effect of option trading is stronger for firms with higher information asymmetry problems. Finally, this paper finds the results are inconsistent with the “quiet Life” hypothesis and the catering hypothesis.https://doi.org/10.1186/s40854-021-00279-5Option tradingCorporate policiesInvestment and financing
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Keming Li
spellingShingle Keming Li
The effect of option trading
Financial Innovation
Option trading
Corporate policies
Investment and financing
author_facet Keming Li
author_sort Keming Li
title The effect of option trading
title_short The effect of option trading
title_full The effect of option trading
title_fullStr The effect of option trading
title_full_unstemmed The effect of option trading
title_sort effect of option trading
publisher SpringerOpen
series Financial Innovation
issn 2199-4730
publishDate 2021-08-01
description Abstract This paper studies the effect of option trading on corporate investment and financing policies. Based on prior literature, I hypothesize that option market induces informed trading and thus reduces information asymmetry and the cost of capital. As a result, firms with high option trading have more investment and financing. Specifically, based on the United States public data, this paper finds that option trading volume increases corporate investment and financing, but reduces cash holdings and corporate payouts. These results are robust to the inclusion of industry or firm fixed effect, a control for endogenous options trading, and the use of alternative measures of option trading and corporate policies. The effect of option trading is stronger for firms with higher information asymmetry problems. Finally, this paper finds the results are inconsistent with the “quiet Life” hypothesis and the catering hypothesis.
topic Option trading
Corporate policies
Investment and financing
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s40854-021-00279-5
work_keys_str_mv AT kemingli theeffectofoptiontrading
AT kemingli effectofoptiontrading
_version_ 1721199620344774656