Index participation units and their effects on the Canadian market : evidence from new issues and their redemptions of TIPs

This study provides new evidence related to basket portfolio trading using the Canadian index participation units, TIPs. First, we determine the linkage between TIPs and the Canadian market as well as the US market. We show that TIPs are Granger-caused by the T35, the T300 and the S&P 500. Also,...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Zoghaib, Rana
Format: Others
Published: 1997
Online Access:http://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/364/1/MQ40207.pdf
Zoghaib, Rana <http://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/view/creators/Zoghaib=3ARana=3A=3A.html> (1997) Index participation units and their effects on the Canadian market : evidence from new issues and their redemptions of TIPs. Masters thesis, Concordia University.
id ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-QMG.364
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-QMG.3642013-10-22T03:40:20Z Index participation units and their effects on the Canadian market : evidence from new issues and their redemptions of TIPs Zoghaib, Rana This study provides new evidence related to basket portfolio trading using the Canadian index participation units, TIPs. First, we determine the linkage between TIPs and the Canadian market as well as the US market. We show that TIPs are Granger-caused by the T35, the T300 and the S&P 500. Also, we find that the T35, which is the basis of TIPs, exerts a substantial impact on the T300; no relation was revealed between the T35 and the S&P 500. Second, we study the effect of issues and redemptions of TIPs on the prices of TIPs, the value of the underlying index, and the prices of the constituent companies in the context of the hypothesis of negatively sloped demand curves for equities. Not only do we uncover a positive price effect stemming from the issue of TIPs for both the constituent companies as well as the T35 Index, but we also document a stronger market impact for large as opposed to small issues. These results support the downward sloping demand curve hypothesis. In addition, we find that the abnormal returns are permanent thus supporting the imperfect substitute hypothesis as opposed to the price pressure hypothesis for new issues. The empirical evidence on the redemptions of TIPs does not support nor reject the downward sloping demand curve hypothesis. It is shown that, based on an information-cleansed sample, redemptions result in insignificant abnormal returns. Finally, it is found that the price of TIPs decreases (increases) following an issue (redemption) 1997 Thesis NonPeerReviewed application/pdf http://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/364/1/MQ40207.pdf Zoghaib, Rana <http://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/view/creators/Zoghaib=3ARana=3A=3A.html> (1997) Index participation units and their effects on the Canadian market : evidence from new issues and their redemptions of TIPs. Masters thesis, Concordia University. http://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/364/
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
description This study provides new evidence related to basket portfolio trading using the Canadian index participation units, TIPs. First, we determine the linkage between TIPs and the Canadian market as well as the US market. We show that TIPs are Granger-caused by the T35, the T300 and the S&P 500. Also, we find that the T35, which is the basis of TIPs, exerts a substantial impact on the T300; no relation was revealed between the T35 and the S&P 500. Second, we study the effect of issues and redemptions of TIPs on the prices of TIPs, the value of the underlying index, and the prices of the constituent companies in the context of the hypothesis of negatively sloped demand curves for equities. Not only do we uncover a positive price effect stemming from the issue of TIPs for both the constituent companies as well as the T35 Index, but we also document a stronger market impact for large as opposed to small issues. These results support the downward sloping demand curve hypothesis. In addition, we find that the abnormal returns are permanent thus supporting the imperfect substitute hypothesis as opposed to the price pressure hypothesis for new issues. The empirical evidence on the redemptions of TIPs does not support nor reject the downward sloping demand curve hypothesis. It is shown that, based on an information-cleansed sample, redemptions result in insignificant abnormal returns. Finally, it is found that the price of TIPs decreases (increases) following an issue (redemption)
author Zoghaib, Rana
spellingShingle Zoghaib, Rana
Index participation units and their effects on the Canadian market : evidence from new issues and their redemptions of TIPs
author_facet Zoghaib, Rana
author_sort Zoghaib, Rana
title Index participation units and their effects on the Canadian market : evidence from new issues and their redemptions of TIPs
title_short Index participation units and their effects on the Canadian market : evidence from new issues and their redemptions of TIPs
title_full Index participation units and their effects on the Canadian market : evidence from new issues and their redemptions of TIPs
title_fullStr Index participation units and their effects on the Canadian market : evidence from new issues and their redemptions of TIPs
title_full_unstemmed Index participation units and their effects on the Canadian market : evidence from new issues and their redemptions of TIPs
title_sort index participation units and their effects on the canadian market : evidence from new issues and their redemptions of tips
publishDate 1997
url http://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/364/1/MQ40207.pdf
Zoghaib, Rana <http://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/view/creators/Zoghaib=3ARana=3A=3A.html> (1997) Index participation units and their effects on the Canadian market : evidence from new issues and their redemptions of TIPs. Masters thesis, Concordia University.
work_keys_str_mv AT zoghaibrana indexparticipationunitsandtheireffectsonthecanadianmarketevidencefromnewissuesandtheirredemptionsoftips
_version_ 1716605332810104832