Foreign Exchange Speculation: An Event Study

Does speculation facilitate price discovery or instability? If it is price discovery, it is beneficial and should be encouraged; if it is instability, welfare is enhanced by its reduction. This paper seeks to distinguish between these two characteristics by analysing those times when speculation in...

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Main Author: Rob Hayward
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2018-02-01
Series:International Journal of Financial Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2227-7072/6/1/22
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spelling doaj-ad93ce5250b64d88b0bed50773a0b18f2020-11-24T21:35:46ZengMDPI AGInternational Journal of Financial Studies2227-70722018-02-01612210.3390/ijfs6010022ijfs6010022Foreign Exchange Speculation: An Event StudyRob Hayward0Business School, University of Brighton, Brighton, BN32RB, UKDoes speculation facilitate price discovery or instability? If it is price discovery, it is beneficial and should be encouraged; if it is instability, welfare is enhanced by its reduction. This paper seeks to distinguish between these two characteristics by analysing those times when speculation in the foreign exchange market is most extreme. A series of event studies are conducted on the extremes of speculative sentiment and speculative activity. If speculation is noise, extreme sentiment and extreme positions should lead to overshooting and increase risk of subsequent reversals. The finding that speculative extremes do not provide information about subsequent returns implies that speculation is part of the process of price discovery and that efforts to reduce it would reduce the informational efficiency of financial markets.http://www.mdpi.com/2227-7072/6/1/22foreign exchangespeculationevent-study
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Rob Hayward
spellingShingle Rob Hayward
Foreign Exchange Speculation: An Event Study
International Journal of Financial Studies
foreign exchange
speculation
event-study
author_facet Rob Hayward
author_sort Rob Hayward
title Foreign Exchange Speculation: An Event Study
title_short Foreign Exchange Speculation: An Event Study
title_full Foreign Exchange Speculation: An Event Study
title_fullStr Foreign Exchange Speculation: An Event Study
title_full_unstemmed Foreign Exchange Speculation: An Event Study
title_sort foreign exchange speculation: an event study
publisher MDPI AG
series International Journal of Financial Studies
issn 2227-7072
publishDate 2018-02-01
description Does speculation facilitate price discovery or instability? If it is price discovery, it is beneficial and should be encouraged; if it is instability, welfare is enhanced by its reduction. This paper seeks to distinguish between these two characteristics by analysing those times when speculation in the foreign exchange market is most extreme. A series of event studies are conducted on the extremes of speculative sentiment and speculative activity. If speculation is noise, extreme sentiment and extreme positions should lead to overshooting and increase risk of subsequent reversals. The finding that speculative extremes do not provide information about subsequent returns implies that speculation is part of the process of price discovery and that efforts to reduce it would reduce the informational efficiency of financial markets.
topic foreign exchange
speculation
event-study
url http://www.mdpi.com/2227-7072/6/1/22
work_keys_str_mv AT robhayward foreignexchangespeculationaneventstudy
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